Mental images can be ambiguous: Reconstruals and reference-frame reversals Mary A. PetersonJohn F. KihlstromMartha L. Glisky OriginalPaper Pages: 107 - 123
Reconstruction of the duration of autobiographical events Christopher D. B. Burt OriginalPaper Pages: 124 - 132
Autobiographical fluency: A method for the study of personal memory B. H. DritschelJ. M. G. WilliamsI. Nimmo-Smith OriginalPaper Pages: 133 - 140
A developmental evaluation of the role of word shape in word recognition Alice F. HealyThomas F. Cunningham OriginalPaper Pages: 141 - 150
False recognition and perception without awareness Steve JoordensPhilip M. Merikle OriginalPaper Pages: 151 - 159
Repetition priming with Japanese Kana scripts in word-fragment completion Shin-Ichi KomatsuMika Naito OriginalPaper Pages: 160 - 170
Young children’s age-of-acquisition estimates for spoken words Amanda C. WalleyJamie L. Metsala OriginalPaper Pages: 171 - 182
Relational and item-specific information in the determination of “blocking effects” Matthew J. SharpsMichael H. Tindall OriginalPaper Pages: 183 - 191
Semantic memory: Complexity or connectivity? Neal E. A. KrollWolfgang Klimesch OriginalPaper Pages: 192 - 210
Misremembering a familiar object: Mnemonic illusion, not drawing bias Gregory V. JonesMaryanne Martin Notes and Comment Pages: 211 - 213