A new study explores how actions influence perception.
A new study reveals execution of action is a combination of random and predictable components that are processed in different brain regions.
Even though people engage in seemingly impulsive decision-making, they may actually be predisposed to curtail it.
Researchers map the neural activation that occurs during the delay between sensation and action.
A new study reports sleeps help improve learning performance in predictable processes.
Neurons in the basal forebrain are responsible for our ability to swiftly halt a planned behavior, a new study reports.
Researchers use neuroimaging technology to identify brain differences between those who procrastinate and those who are doers. The study reveals people with poor action control have a larger amygdala, and the connection between the dorsal ACC and amygdala is less pronounced.
Researchers report the actions of those with OCD don't take into account things they have learned.
Unexpected sounds make people stop an action more often than when they hear no sounds at all. A new study offers an insight into how sensory cues would speed up the brain's communication with the motor system.
Researchers say acting out scenarios may help to improve prospective memory. Poor prospective memory, researchers report, may be an early indicator of Alzheimer's disease.
Researchers provide evidence that the posterior parietal cortex plays a vital role in converting vision into action.
According to a new study, the brain plans multiple actions simultaneously prior to selecting one action to execute.