18.12.2019: Work by Cosima Schneider, Nadine Bade (Paris) and Markus Janczyk (Bremen) on capacity-limitations of presupposition processing has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Psycholinguistic Research.
7.7.2019: Cosima Schneider's first paper on presupposition processing (together with Carolin Schonard and Gerhard Jäger (Tübingen), Michael Franke (Osnabrück) and Markus Janczyk (Bremen) was accepted for publication in Cognition.
7.5.2019: A new paper of Rolf Ulrich and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica. This paper reports evidence that time-space congruency is defined by spatial features of external action consequences rather than of effectors.
15.2.2019: A new paper of David Rosenbaum (University of Caifornia at Riverside, USA) and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. In this paper, the authors describe the work and life of Ted Crossman, well-known for his work on the power law of learning and an influential model of aiming movements. Less so, however, was known who Crossman actually was.
10.2.2019: A new paper of Moritz Durst, Rolf Ulrich, and Markus Janczyk on the effect of preparation on no-go backward crosstalk was accepted for publication in Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
8.2.2019: Christoph Naefgen successfully defended his PhD thesis. Congratulations!
22.1.2019: A new paper by Markus Janczyk, Aiping Xiong (PennState University, USA) and Robert W. Proctor (Purdue University, USA) was accepted for publication in Human Factors. This papers reports several experiments on S-R and R-E compatibility when using touchless gestures as responses.
29.11.2018: A new paper by Moritz Durst and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica. In that paper, more evidence for a distinction of compatibility-based and no-go BCEs from the diffusion model was reported.
17.9.2018: A new paper by Christoph Naefgen and Markus Janczyk on backward crosstalk for free-choice tasks was accepted for publication in Cognitive Processing.
14.8.2018: Markus Janczyk and Rolf Ulrich received fundings from the DFG (German Research Foundation) for their 3-year project "Revealing mechanisms underlying backward crosstalk effects in multitasking" witin the Priority Program 1772 "Human performance under multiple cognitive task requirements: From basic mechanisms to optimized task scheduling".
6.7.2018: A review paper on cognitive control in multitasking written by Stefanie Schuch (RWTH Aachen), David Dignath (Freiburg), Marco Steinhauser (Eichstätt), and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Psychononomic Bulletin and Review.
28.6.2018: A new paper investigating free-choice selection with mouse-tracking of Diana Vogel and Stefan Scherbaum (TU Dresden) and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica.
18.6.2018: Finally.... a paper of Heinrich René Liesefeld (LMU Munich) and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Behavior Research Methods. The paper investiagtes the behavior of several measures suggested to combine speed and accuracy in cases of speed-accuracy trade-offs, and demonstrates that most of them do not compensate in this case and should thus be avoided.
13.6.2018: A new paper on backward crosstalk and dimensional overlap written by Lynn Huestegge and Aleks Pieczykolan (Würzburg) and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica.
23.5.2018: Are free-choice tasks random generation tasks? A new paper on this topic written by Christoph Naefgen and Markus Janczyk was accepted for publication in Experimental Brain Research.
30.4.2018: A new paper on self-prioritization (or the self-salience effect) was accepted for publication in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. This work was done by Markus Janczyk together with Glyn W. Humphreys (Oxford, UK) and Jie Sui (Bath, UK), and started already before Glyn's unexpected and too-early passing away in January 2016.
23.2.2018: A paper on individual differences in uncertainy tolerance and cognitive control, authored by Philipp Schröder (Tübingen), David Dignath (Freiburg) and Markus Janczyk has been accepted for publication in the Experimental Psychology.
21.2.2018: A new paper where Markus Janczyk and Veronika Lerche (University of Heidelberg) analyzed response-effect compatibility with the Diffusion Model has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.
15.2.2018: The Frontiers Research Topic on Multitasking and Executive Functions edited by Tilo Strobach and Mike Wendt (MSH Hamburg) and Markus Janczyk is now online here.
12.1.2018: A paper on backward crosstalk induced by no-go tasks, written by Moritz Durst and Markus Janczyk, has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
4.1.2018: A paper demonstrating that written recall of long-term memory items is better than oral recall, authored by Markus Janczyk together with Martin Aßmann and Joachim Grabowski (Hannover), was accepted for publication in the American Journal of Psychology.
1.12.2017: A paper on the costs and electrophysiological signature of monitoring action effects co-authored by Markus Janczyk together with Robert Wirth and Wilfried Kunde (Würzburg) and Marco Steinhauser and Robert Steinhauser (Eichstätt) was accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Performance and Perception.
30.9.2017: A new paper on anticipatory grasp planning in pre-school children co-authored by Markus Janczyk together with Oliver Herbort (Würzburg) and Juliane Büschelberger (Munich) was accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.
18.7.2017: Monitoring goals is costly... A new paper on this topic by Markus Janczyk together with Robert Wirth and Wilfried Kunde (from Würzburg) has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
3.7.2017: Christoph Naefgen's work on the sources of the RT difference between free- and forced-choice tasks done together with Markus Janczyk and Michael Dambacher (Konstanz) has been accepted for publication in Psychological Research.
22.5.2017: A new paper on action effect monitoring written by Wilfried Kunde, Robert Wirth (both from Würzburg) and Markus Janczyk has been accepted for publication in Psychological Research in a special issue on multitasking.
21.5.2017: Some experiments on goal-driven backward crosstalk done by Sandra Renas, Moritz Durst and Markus Janczyk were accepted for publication in Psychological Research.
3.5.2017: A new paper on effector system-specific conflict adaptation written by Markus Janczyk and Hartmut Leuthold has been accepted for publication in the Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
11.4.2017: A new paper on research about the source of backward crosstalk written by Markus Janczyk, Sandra Renas, and Moritz Durst has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Expermental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance.
1.4.2017: Markus Janczyk was elected as a board member ("Beisitzer") in the speakers' group heading the General Psychology section ("Fachgruppe Allgemeine Psychologie") of the German Psychological Society (DGPs).
22.3.2017: A new paper on backward crosstalk in free-choice tasks of Christoph Naefgen, Andre Caissie and Markus Janczyk has been accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica.
3.3.2017: A new paper on backward crosstalk in younger and older adults, written by Markus together with Patrik Mittelstädt and Carolin Wienrich from Würzburg, has been accepted for publication in Experimental Aging Research.
14.2.2017: Markus' new paper on response and item selection accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Pychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
20.1.2017: New paper on phasic valence and arousal and their interplay with conflict adaptation together with David Dignath (Freiburg) and Andreas Eder (Würzburg) accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica.
19.12.2016: Markus receives a new grant for a research project (JA2307/1-2) from the German Research Foundation ("Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft", DFG).The project continues working on dual-task interference in various classes of human behavior and on identifying similarities and differences between forced- and free-choice tasks.
4.12.11.2016: New paper on effects of a no-go Task 2 on Task 1 performance in dual-tasking of Markus and Lynn Huestegge (Würzburg) accepted for publication in Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics.
15.11.2016: New paper on backward crosstalk in children by Markus together with Juliane Büschelberger and Oliver Herbort (Würzburg) accepted for publication in the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.
17.8.2016: New paper of Markus together with David Dignath on time-based effect anticipation accepted for publication in Psychological Research.
7.6.2016: New paper of Markus, Moritz, and Rolf Ulrich on distal action effects accepted for publication in Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
6.2.2016: Two new papers on visual working memory and the retro-cue effect accepted today. One with Marcel Gressmann (Frontiers in Psychology), the other with Heiko Reuss (Conscioussness and Cognition).
7.12.2015: The 2nd edition of Markus and Roland's stats textbook "Inferenzstatistik verstehen. Von A wie Signifikanztest bis Z wie Konfidenzintervall" (published by Springer) is now available. More information here.
4.12.2015: New paper on the role of action effects for dual-tasking accepted for publication in the Psychologische Rundschau.
1.11.2015: Sandra and Moritz joined the lab as PhD students.
19.10.2015: New paper on social inhibition of return written by Markus (together with Thomas Dolk and Timothy Welsh) accepted for publication in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.
1.10.2015: New paper on backward crosstalk written by Markus accepted for publication in Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance.
11.9.2015: New paper accepted for publication in Motor Control (together with Wilfried Kunde).
17.8.2015: Markus was awarded a new project from the state of Baden-Württemberg. The project investigates several types of backward-crosstalk in dual-task situations and their sources.
17.7.2015: New paper accepted for publication in Acta Psychologica (together with Robert Wirth, Roland Pfister, and Wilfried Kunde).
25.6.2015: Markus was awarded a new project from the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; DFG). The project is on "The role of effect monitoring for dual-task performance" and is a joint project with Wilfried Kunde at University of Würzburg. It is embedded into the DFG priority program 1772 "Human performance under multiple cognitive task requirements: From basic mechanisms to optimized task scheduling".
1.6.2015: Both special issues on Cognitive Psychology in the context of everyday life that Markus and Roland Pfister (Würzburg) have edited for the German In-Mind Magazine are now online: Part 1: Perception and Action and Part 2: Learning and Memory.
1.4.2015: André started his work in the lab today.
2.3.2015: Christoph started his work in the lab today.
4.2.2015: Markus got his certification about his Habilitation at the Faculty of Life Sciences at Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg.
22.12.2014: New paper accepted for publication in Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics (together with Motonori Yamaguchi, Robert Proctor, and Roland Pfister).
19.12.2014: Markus and Stefan Scherbaum (TU Dresden) were awarded with fundings from the DAAD to organize a Summer School on "Human Action Control" in Cluj (Romania) in 2015.
12.12.2014: Homepage now available in English language
9.12.2014: Lab started its work (thanks to Pia and Björn!)
7.11.2014: Homepage online...