Myeong-Ho Sohn

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Myeong-Ho Sohn

Assistant Professor of Psychology


Contact:

2125 G Street, NW, #313A Washington DC 20052

Research Interests:

Neural mechanisms of executive control, memory retrieval, conflict monitoring.

Current Research

The cognitive environment is overloaded with information. As a cognitive scientist, I am interested in cognitive control, which refers to a set of processes recruited when people select and maintain task-relevant information while avoiding task-irrelevant distractors. In studying such control processes, I have specifically focused on three major areas: First, our external environment provides numerous stimuli that are appropriate for different thoughts and behaviors. However, these responses are often in conflict with each other. For example, for the chocolate-covered strawberry cupcake that you see in the bakery window, “eating” would be appropriate. But for the reflection of your protruding gut, if you have one, on the very same window, “exercising” would be appropriate. How do we detect such conflict, which is the beginning of cognitive control? Second, our thought processes are fleeting from one moment to another, creating multiple goals to pursue and multiple associations with the same stimulus. Unfortunately, the majority of such streams of thought available at the moment are irrelevant to current cognitive goals. How do people successfully deal with interference from past experiences? Third, different people are differently successful in exerting cognitive control. How do individual differences in cognitive capacity contribute to various aspects of cognitive control? My research has been a multi-faceted endeavor to attack these questions using a variety of methodologies and experimental paradigms.

Publications

Hydock, C. & Sohn, M. H. (In press). Dissociating the Components of Switch Cost Using Two to Two Cue-task Mapping. To appear in Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance.

Chen, Z., Mo, L., Honomichl, R., & Sohn, M.-H. (2010). Analogical symbols: The role of visual cues in long-term transfer. Metaphor and Symbols, 25, 93-113.

Sohn, M.-H., Albert, M. V., Jung, K., Carter, C. S., & Anderson, J. R. (2007). Anticipation of conflict monitoring in the anterior cingulate cortex and the prefrontal cortex. Proceedings of Academy of Sciences, 104, 10330-10334.

Sohn, M.-H., Goode, A., Stenger, V. A, Jung, K.-J., Carter, C. S., & Anderson, J. R. (2005). An information-processing model of three cortical regions: Evidence in episodic memory retrieval. NeuroImage, 25, 21-33.