Assessing a retrieval account of the generation and perceptual-interference effects Neil W. MulliganDaniel Peterson OriginalPaper Pages: 1371 - 1382
Why does working memory span predict complex cognition? Testing the strategy affordance hypothesis Heather BaileyJohn DunloskyMichael J. Kane OriginalPaper Pages: 1383 - 1390
Super Memory Bros.: Going from mirror patterns to concordant patterns via similarity enhancements Jason D. OzubkoSteve Joordens OriginalPaper Pages: 1391 - 1402
Self-centered memories: The reminiscence bump and the self Clare J. RathboneChris J. A. MoulinMartin A. Conway OriginalPaper Pages: 1403 - 1414
Perceptual representations in false recognition and priming of pictures Yana WeinsteinDavid R. Shanks OriginalPaper Pages: 1415 - 1428
Metacognition and part-set cuing: Can interference be predicted at retrieval? Matthew G. RhodesAlan D. Castel OriginalPaper Pages: 1429 - 1438
The effect of study modality on false recognition Rebekah E. SmithR. Reed HuntM. Patrick Gallagher OriginalPaper Pages: 1439 - 1449
Similar phenomena, different mechanisms: Semantic and phonological false memories are produced by independent mechanisms McKenzie R. BallouMitchell S. Sommers OriginalPaper Pages: 1450 - 1459
Ratio and difference comparisons of expected reward in decision-making tasks Darrell A. WorthyW. Todd MaddoxArthur B. Markman OriginalPaper Pages: 1460 - 1469
Training and transfer effects in task switching Meredith MinearPriti Shah OriginalPaper Pages: 1470 - 1483
Multiple levels of control in the Stroop task Julie M. BuggLarry L. JacobyJeffrey P. Toth OriginalPaper Pages: 1484 - 1494
An analysis of age differences in perceptual speed Jennifer McCabeMarilyn Hartman OriginalPaper Pages: 1495 - 1508
The effect of repetition and similarity on sequence learning Padraic MonaghanChris Rowson OriginalPaper Pages: 1509 - 1514