Levels of processing in disruptive effects of prior information W. Trammell Neill OriginalPaper Pages: 477 - 484
Semantic congruity and expectancy as separate processes William P. BanksHedy White OriginalPaper Pages: 485 - 493
The stimulus prefix is not irrelevant and is redundant in different ways John C. JahnkeRay E. BowerRobert A. Bjork OriginalPaper Pages: 501 - 506
Remembering words and how often they occurred in memory-impaired patients Milton E. StraussHerbert WeingartnerKaren Thompson OriginalPaper Pages: 507 - 510
Context effects: Classroom tests and context independence William H. SaufleySandra R. OtakaJoseph L. Bavaresco OriginalPaper Pages: 522 - 528
Spelling-sound effects in reading: Time-course and decision criteria Gloria S. WatersMark S. Seidenberg OriginalPaper Pages: 557 - 572
Detection of coherence-disrupting and coherence-conferring alterations in text Jamshed Jay BharuchaKatherine L. OlneyPaula P. Schnurr OriginalPaper Pages: 573 - 578
Sentence context effects on lexically ambiguous words: Evidence for a postaccess inhibition process Sachiko Kinoshita OriginalPaper Pages: 579 - 595