The Wiley Handbook of Cognitive Control 2017
DOI: 10.1002/9781118920497.ch23
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Cognitive Control and Neuroeconomics

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…As an example of conflict detection and resolution, De Martino, Kumaran, Seymour, and Dolan (2006) show that ACC is activated while subjects cognitively detect and overcome the framing effect. In recent studies, however, the picture of conflict detection and resolution has become more complex and less neatly fitting a traditional dual-process framework (Winecoff & Huettel, 2017). In the context of risky decision-making, Venkatraman, Payne, Bettman, Luce, and Huettel (2009) distinguish between brain areas directly related to “choices” from brain areas related to “strategic choices” over which decision mechanism to use.…”
Section: The Neuroscience Of Two-and-a-half Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As an example of conflict detection and resolution, De Martino, Kumaran, Seymour, and Dolan (2006) show that ACC is activated while subjects cognitively detect and overcome the framing effect. In recent studies, however, the picture of conflict detection and resolution has become more complex and less neatly fitting a traditional dual-process framework (Winecoff & Huettel, 2017). In the context of risky decision-making, Venkatraman, Payne, Bettman, Luce, and Huettel (2009) distinguish between brain areas directly related to “choices” from brain areas related to “strategic choices” over which decision mechanism to use.…”
Section: The Neuroscience Of Two-and-a-half Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%