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CogNet Library: Journals
Perception & Psychophysics
Psychonomic Society Publications
Volume 67 Issue 2
Feb 01, 2005
ISSN: 00315117
Perception & Psychophysics
Volume 67 : Issue 2
Table of Contents
Remembering "what" brings along "where" in visual working memory
Ingrid R. Olson and Christy Marshuetz
Page
185
Attentional and perceptual sources of the auditory attentional blink
Sbastien Tremblay, Franois Vachon and Dylan M. Jones
Page
195
The phantom illumination illusion
Daniele Zavagno
Page
209
The onset of receding motion captures attention: Comment on Franconeri and Simons (2003)
Richard A. Abrams and Shawn E. Christ
Page
219
The specificity of perceptual learning in speech processing
Frank Eisner and James M. McQueen
Page
224
Efficient visual search without top-down or bottom-up guidance
DeLiang Wang, Arni Kristjansson and Ken Nakayama
Page
239
Equating tasks and sustaining attention in children and adults: The methodological and theoretical utility of d matching
Cynthia Laurie-Rose, Laura Bennett-Murphy, Lori M. Curtindale, Andrea L. Granger and Heidi B. Walker
Page
254
A comparison of length-matching and length-fractionation measures of Mller-Lyer distortions
John Predebon
Page
264
Do we hear size or sound? Balls dropped on plates
Massimo Grassi
Page
274
Inhibition and decay of motor and nonmotor priming
Uwe Mattler
Page
285
The frequency effect for pseudowords in the lexical decision task
Manuel Perea, Eva Rosa and Consolacin Gmez
Page
301
Contributions of temporal and place cues in pitch perception in absolute pitch possessors
Waka Fujisaki and Makio Kashino
Page
315
The persistence of object file representations
Nicholaus S. Noles, Brian J. Scholl and Stephen R. Mitroff
Page
324
Intermittent visual information and the multiple time scales of visual motor control of continuous isometric force production
Jacob J. Sosnoff and Karl M. Newell
Page
335
A spatial explanation for synchrony biases in perceptual grouping: Consequences for the temporal-binding hypothesis
Guy Wallis
Page
345
Subordinate-level categorization relies on high spatial frequencies to a greater degree than basic-level categorization
Charles A. Collin and Patricia A. McMullen
Page
354
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