An analysis of the time course of attention in preview search Glyn W. HumphreysBettina Jung StalmannChris Olivers OriginalPaper Pages: 713 - 730
Metamers in the haptic perception of heaviness and moveableness Kevin ShockleyClaudia CarelloM. T. Turvey OriginalPaper Pages: 731 - 742
Attentional selection of a peripheral ring overrules the central attentional bias Karina J. LinnellGlyn W. Humphreys OriginalPaper Pages: 743 - 751
The influence of head contour and nose angle on the perception of eye-gaze direction Stephen R. H. LangtonHelen HoneymanEmma Tessler OriginalPaper Pages: 752 - 771
Different effects of eyelid blinks and target blanking on saccadic suppression of displacement Heiner DeubelBruce BridgemanWerner X. Schneider OriginalPaper Pages: 772 - 778
Spectral tilt as a cue to word segmentation in infancy and adulthood Erik D. ThiessenJenny R. Saffran OriginalPaper Pages: 779 - 791
The effects of global grouping laws on surface lightness perception Songjoo OhJung-Oh Kim OriginalPaper Pages: 792 - 799
Sustained change blindness to incremental scene rotation: A dissociation between explicit change detection and visual memory Andrew HollingworthJohn M. Henderson OriginalPaper Pages: 800 - 807
Temporal interval production and short-term memory David T. FieldJohn A. Groeger OriginalPaper Pages: 808 - 819
Mandarin speech perception by ear and eye follows a universal principle Trevor H. ChenDominic W. Massaro OriginalPaper Pages: 820 - 836
The use of a distractor-assigned response slows later responding in a location negative priming task Eric BuckolzAdam GoldfarbMichael Khan OriginalPaper Pages: 837 - 845
Unconscious perception: A model-based approach to method and evidence Michael SnodgrassEdward BernatHoward Shevrin OriginalPaper Pages: 846 - 867
Valid distinctions between conscious and unconscious perception? Steven J. HaaseGary D. Fisk Comments and Reply Pages: 868 - 871
Unconscious perception: The need for a paradigm shift Daniel HolenderKatia Duscherer Comments and Reply Pages: 872 - 881
Unconscious perception and the classic dissociation paradigm: A new angle? Eyal M. Reingold Comments and Reply Pages: 882 - 887
Unconscious perception at the objective detection threshold exists Michael SnodgrassEdward BernatHoward Shevrin Comments and Reply Pages: 888 - 895