Novel popout without novelty Kristen A. DilibertoJeanette AltarribaW. Trammell Neill OriginalPaper Pages: 429 - 434
Long-term positive and negative identity priming: Evidence for episodic retrieval Doug Lowe OriginalPaper Pages: 435 - 443
The gender difference on the Mental Rotations test is not due to performance factors Mary S. Masters OriginalPaper Pages: 444 - 448
Retrieval dynamics in recognition and list discrimination: Further evidence of separate processes of familiarity and recall Douglas L. HintzmanDavid A. CaultonDaniel J. Levitin OriginalPaper Pages: 449 - 462
The role of item distinctiveness in short-term recall of order information Thomas F. CunninghamWilliam R. MarmieAlice F. Healy OriginalPaper Pages: 463 - 476
Creating proactive interference in immediate recall: Building a DOG from a DART, a mop, and a FIG Gerald TehanMichael S. Humphreys OriginalPaper Pages: 477 - 489
Simulating individual word identification thresholds and errors in the fragmentation task Johannes C. ZieglerArnaud ReyArthur M. Jacobs OriginalPaper Pages: 490 - 501
Prime time advertisements: Repetition priming from faces seen on subject recruitment posters Vicki BruceDerek CarsonSteve Kelly OriginalPaper Pages: 502 - 515
Flashbulb memories and the underlying mechanisms of their formation: Toward an emotional-integrative model Catrin FinkenauerOlivier LuminetPierre Philippot OriginalPaper Pages: 516 - 531
A year’s memories: The calendar effect in autobiographical recall Matthew A. KurbatSteven K. ShevellLance J. Rips OriginalPaper Pages: 532 - 552
Effects of target set sizeon feelings of knowing and cued recall: Implications for the cue effectiveness andpartial-retrieval hypotheses Thomas A. Schreiber OriginalPaper Pages: 553 - 571
Effect of normal aging on the manipulation of information in working memory Sylvie BellevilleNancie RouleauNicole Caza OriginalPaper Pages: 572 - 583
A “word length effect”for sign language: Further evidence for the role of language in structuring working memory Margaret WilsonKaren Emmorey OriginalPaper Pages: 584 - 590
Accessing singular antecedents in conjoined phrases Jason E. AlbrechtCharles Clifton OriginalPaper Pages: 599 - 610