Cognitive control of action: The role of action effects Dieter NattkemperMichael Ziessler Editorial 28 November 2003 Pages: 71 - 73
Coloring an action: Intending to produce color events eliminates the Stroop effect Bernhard Hommel Original Article 21 November 2003 Pages: 74 - 90
Response priming by supraliminal and subliminal action effects Wilfried Kunde Original Article 22 November 2003 Pages: 91 - 96
Action induction through action observation Sara De MaeghtWolfgang Prinz Original Article 03 February 2004 Pages: 97 - 114
The role of action effects in infants’ action control Petra HaufBirgit ElsnerGisa Aschersleben Original Article 03 December 2003 Pages: 115 - 125
The ideomotor principle and motor sequence acquisition: Tone effects facilitate movement chunking Christian StöckerJoachim Hoffmann Original Article 27 November 2003 Pages: 126 - 137
Contiguity and contingency in action-effect learning Birgit ElsnerBernhard Hommel Original Article 18 December 2003 Pages: 138 - 154
Variable action effects: response control by context-specific effect anticipations Andrea KieselJoachim Hoffmann Original Article 01 November 2003 Pages: 155 - 162
The role of anticipation and intention in the learning of effects of self-performed actions Michael ZiesslerDieter NattkemperPeter A. Frensch Original Article 22 November 2003 Pages: 163 - 175
A short history of ideo-motor action Armin StockClaudia Stock Original Article 18 December 2003 Pages: 176 - 188
What’s at the top in the top-down control of action? Script-sharing and ‘top-top’ control of action in cognitive experiments Andreas RoepstorffChris Frith Original Article 05 February 2004 Pages: 189 - 198