The effect of orthographic similarity on lexical retrieval: Resolving neighborhood conflicts Sally Andrews OriginalPaper Pages: 439 - 461
Recognition memory with little or no remembering: Implications for a detection model John M. GardinerVernon H. Gregg OriginalPaper Pages: 474 - 479
History of the Psychonomic Society IV: The development of the Psychonomic Society Donald A. Dewsbury OriginalPaper Pages: 492 - 500
Failure to detect changes to attended objects in motion pictures Daniel T. LevinDaniel J. Simons Brief Reports Pages: 501 - 506
Object-based allocation of visual attention in response to exogenous, but not endogenous, spatial precues Andrew D. Macquistan Brief Reports Pages: 512 - 515
Heading backward: Perceived direction of movement in contracting and expanding optical flow fields Dirk KerzelHeiko Hecht Brief Reports Pages: 516 - 523
Spatial cuing in a stereoscopic display: Evidence for a “depth-aware” attentional focus Paul AtchleyArthur F. KramerJan Theeuwes Brief Reports Pages: 524 - 529
Variability of timing in expressive piano performance increases with interval duration Bruno H. Repp Brief Reports Pages: 530 - 534
Visual and tactile memory for 2-D patterns: Effects of changes in size and left-right orientation Kavitha SrinivasAnthony J. GreeneRandolph D. Easton Brief Reports Pages: 535 - 540
Proactive interference plays a role in the word-length effect James S. NairneIan NeathMatt Serra Brief Reports Pages: 541 - 545
Memory-basedsame-different conceptualization by pigeons Michael E. YoungEdward A. WassermanRhonda M. dalrymple Brief Reports Pages: 552 - 558
Directed forgetting in pigeons resulting from the reallocation of memory-maintaining processes on forget-cue trials Daren H. KaiserLou M. SherburneThomas R. Zentall Brief Reports Pages: 559 - 565
Illusions of familiarity caused by cohort activation Stephen A. DewhurstGraham J. hitch Brief Reports Pages: 566 - 571
False recognition of associates: How robust is the effect? Audrey A. TussingRobert L. Greene Brief Reports Pages: 572 - 576
Pictorial encoding reduces false recognition of semantic associates Lana IsraelDaniel L. Schacter Brief Reports Pages: 577 - 581
Priming on perceptual implicit memory tests can be achieved through presentation of associates Kathleen B. McDermott Brief Reports Pages: 582 - 586