HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Christopher R. Madan from the Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB have published the research work: High reward makes items easier to remember, but harder to bind to a new temporal context, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Participants respond more quickly (~20 ms) in simple monetary incentive tasks when the trial is preceded by a high-value reward cue, than if it is preceded by a low-value reward cue (e_g, the participant is presented with the reward cue, and told to press a button once a target appears; Abler et_al, 2005 . . .

If you want to have access to all the content you need to log in!
Thanks :)
If you don't have an account, you can create one here.