The attentional control of lexical processing pathways: Reversing the word frequency effect David A. BalotaMark B. LawJason D. Zevin OriginalPaper Pages: 1081 - 1089
Taking the “text” out of context effects in repetition priming of word identification Michael E. J. MassonColin M. Macleod OriginalPaper Pages: 1090 - 1097
Lexical processing and text integration of function and content words: Evidence from priming and eye fixations A. René SchmauderRobin K. MorrisDavid V. Poynor OriginalPaper Pages: 1098 - 1108
The potential for experimenter bias effects in word recognition experiments Kenneth I. Forster OriginalPaper Pages: 1109 - 1115
The phonological similarity effect in immediate recall: Positions of shared phonemes Xiaojian LiRichard SchweickertJack Gandour OriginalPaper Pages: 1116 - 1125
Specificity of auditory implicit and explicit memory: Is perceptual priming for environmental sounds exemplar specific? Chung-Yiu Peter Chiu OriginalPaper Pages: 1126 - 1139
Transfer-appropriate processing (TAP) Jeffery J. FranksCarol W. BilbreyTimothy P. McNamara OriginalPaper Pages: 1140 - 1151
Further evidence on the similarity of memory processes in the process dissociation procedure and in source monitoring Melanie C. SteffensAxel BuchnerEdgar Erdfelder OriginalPaper Pages: 1152 - 1164
Picture superiority in conceptual memory: Dissociative effects of encoding and retrieval tasks Chandan J. VaidyaJohn D. E. Gabrieli OriginalPaper Pages: 1165 - 1172
The face typicality-recognizability relationship: Encoding or retrieval locus? Kenneth A. DeffenbacherJohn JohansonAlice J. O’Toole OriginalPaper Pages: 1173 - 1182
A model of human performance on the traveling salesperson problem J. N. MacgregorT. C. OrmerodE. P. Chronicle OriginalPaper Pages: 1183 - 1190
The traveling salesman problem: A hierarchical model Scott M. GrahamAnupam JoshiZygmunt Pizlo OriginalPaper Pages: 1191 - 1204
The role of working memory in analogical mapping James A. WaltzAlbert LauKeith J. Holyoak OriginalPaper Pages: 1205 - 1212
Serial causation: Occasion setting in a causal induction task Michael E. YoungJanelle L. JohnsonEdward A. Wasserman OriginalPaper Pages: 1213 - 1230
The right hemisphere maintains solution-related activation for yet-to-be-solved problems Mark Jung BeemanEdward M. Bowden OriginalPaper Pages: 1231 - 1241
Folding a fish, making a mushroom: The role of diagrams in executing assembly procedures Laura R. NovickDouglas L. Morse OriginalPaper Pages: 1242 - 1256
Not all narrative shifts function equally Shannon Scott RichHolly A. Taylor OriginalPaper Pages: 1257 - 1266
41st Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society New Orleans, Louisiana November 16–19,2000 OriginalPaper Pages: 1267 - 1267