The cocktail-party problem revisited: early processing and selection of multi-talker speech Adelbert W. Bronkhorst ReviewPaper Open access 01 April 2015 Pages: 1465 - 1487
Limited capacity for memory tasks with multiple features within a single object John PalmerBritt BostonCathleen M. Moore OriginalPaper 06 May 2015 Pages: 1488 - 1499
A “blanking effect” for surface features: Transsaccadic spatial-frequency discrimination is improved by postsaccadic blanking Katharina WeißWerner X. SchneiderArvid Herwig OriginalPaper 20 May 2015 Pages: 1500 - 1506
Foreperiod and range effects on time interval categorization Vincent LaflammeDan ZakaySimon Grondin OriginalPaper 29 May 2015 Pages: 1507 - 1514
Irrelevant reward and selection histories have different influences on task-relevant attentional selection Mary H. MacLeanBarry Giesbrecht OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1515 - 1528
Oculomotor Capture by New and Unannounced Color Singletons during Visual Search James D. RetellDustin VeniniStefanie I. Becker OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1529 - 1543
The effects of visual search efficiency on object-based attention Adam S. GreenbergMaya RosenMarlene Behrmann OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1544 - 1557
The long and the short of priming in visual search Wouter KruijneMartijn Meeter OriginalPaper Open access 02 April 2015 Pages: 1558 - 1573
There is more to trial history than priming in attentional capture experiments Florian GollerUlrich Ansorge OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1574 - 1584
Temporal cues derived from statistical patterns can overcome resource limitations in the attentional blink Troy A. W. VisserJeneva L. OhanJames T. Enns OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1585 - 1595
Revisiting the spread of sparing in the attentional blink Xi ChenXiaolin Zhou OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1596 - 1607
The effect of memory and context changes on color matches to real objects Sarah R. AllredMaria Olkkonen OriginalPaper Open access 31 March 2015 Pages: 1608 - 1624
Selection of multiple cued items is possible during visual short-term memory maintenance Michi MatsukuraShaun P. Vecera OriginalPaper 31 March 2015 Pages: 1625 - 1646
Inhibition of return: A phenomenon in search of a definition and a theoretical framework Kristie R. DukewichRaymond M. Klein OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1647 - 1658
Low cognitive load strengthens distractor interference while high load attenuates when cognitive load and distractor possess similar visual characteristics Takehiro MinamotoZach ShipsteadRandall W. Engle OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1659 - 1673
Attention modulates specificity effects in spoken word recognition: Challenges to the time-course hypothesis Rachel M. TheodoreSheila E. BlumsteinSahil Luthra OriginalPaper 01 April 2015 Pages: 1674 - 1684
Sensory uncertainty leads to systematic misperception of the direction of motion in depth Jacqueline M. FulvioMonica L. RosenBas Rokers OriginalPaper 01 April 2015 Pages: 1685 - 1696
Effects of bowing on perception of attractiveness Takayuki OsugiJun I. Kawahara OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1697 - 1714
Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) exhibit the decoy effect in a perceptual discrimination task Audrey E. ParrishTheodore A. EvansMichael J. Beran OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1715 - 1725
Individual differences in highly skilled visual perceptual-motor striking skill Sean MüllerJohn BrentonCorinne Reid OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1726 - 1736
Introducing a control condition in the classic oddball paradigm: Oddballs are overestimated in duration not only because of their oddness Teresa BirngruberHannes SchröterRolf Ulrich OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1737 - 1749
Converging evidence that common timing processes underlie temporal-order and simultaneity judgments: a model-based analysis Miguel A. García-PérezRocío Alcalá-Quintana OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1750 - 1766
Octuplicate this interval! Axiomatic examination of the ratio properties of duration perception Jana BirkenbuschWolfgang EllermeierFlorian Kattner OriginalPaper 27 March 2015 Pages: 1767 - 1780
Vicarious experiences and detection accuracy while observing pain and touch: The effect of perspective taking S. VandenbrouckeG. CrombezL. Goubert OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1781 - 1793
Experience shapes our odor perception but depends on the initial perceptual processing of the stimulus Charlotte SindingGérard CoureaudThierry Thomas-Danguin OriginalPaper 02 April 2015 Pages: 1794 - 1806
Erratum to: Attentional control in the attentional blink is modulated by odor Lorenza S. ColzatoRoberta SellaroBernhard Hommel Erratum 28 May 2015 Pages: 1807 - 1807