about
Stochastic accumulation of feature information in perception and memory.Contextual diversity, not word frequency, determines word-naming and lexical decision times.Recent evolution of learnability in American English from 1800 to 2000.Is children's reading "good enough"? Links between online processing and comprehension as children read syntactically ambiguous sentences.Emotion and memory: a recognition advantage for positive and negative words independent of arousal.The unexplained nature of reading.Relative judgement is relatively difficult: Evidence against the role of relative judgement in absolute identification.A behavioral database for masked form priming.Individual differences in reading aloud: a mega-study, item effects, and some models.Why to treat subjects as fixed effects.The Relative Importance of Perceptual and Memory Sampling Processes in Determining the Time Course of Absolute Identification.The Sandwich Priming Paradigm Does Not Reduce Lexical Competitor Effects.A robust preference for cheap-and-easy strategies over reliable strategies when verifying personal memories.Modeling lexical decision: the form of frequency and diversity effects.Automatic vigilance for negative words in lexical decision and naming: comment on Larsen, Mercer, and Balota (2006).Letters in time and retinotopic space.Why additional presentations help identify a stimulus.Phonographic neighbors, not orthographic neighbors, determine word naming latencies.Visual Word Recognition Volume 2Visual Word Recognition Volume 1Letters in words are read simultaneously, not in left-to-right sequenceEmotional sound symbolism: Languages rapidly signal valence via phonemes
P50
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P50
description
onderzoeker
@nl
psychologist at the University of Warwick
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name
James Adelman
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James S. Adelman
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James S. Adelman
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James Adelman
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James S. Adelman
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James S. Adelman
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J. S. Adelman
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James Adelman
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James Adelman
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James S. Adelman
@en
James S. Adelman
@nl
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