0000-0003-2869-0085
Individual Differences in Visual Illusions: Graphical and Analytic Approaches For Finding Structure in Real-World Cases
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Beyond Means: Are There Stable Qualitative Individual Differences in Cognition?
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Post-replication citation patterns in psychology: Four case studies
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The brain as a dynamically active organ
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Replication Under Underdetermination: Introducing Systematic Replications Framework
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The Generalizability Crisis
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The perceptual wink model of non-switching attentional blink tasks
Left visual-field advantage in the dual-stream RSVP task and reading-direction: A study in three nations
Spatial separation between targets constrains maintenance of attention on multiple objects
Humans can decipher adversarial images
How Transparent and Reproducible Are Studies That Use Animal Models of Opioid Addiction?
The present and future of peer review: Ideas, interventions, and evidence
Taxonomy of interventions at academic institutions to improve research quality [version 1; peer review: 2 not approved]
How transparent and reproducible are studies that use animal models of opioid addiction?
Engaging undergraduate students in preprint peer review
No evidence that individual alpha frequency (IAF) represents a mechanism underlying motion-position illusions
Team scientists should normalize disagreement
Group authorship, an excellent opportunity laced with ethical, legal and technical challenges
Hypometria of saccadic eye movements to targets in rapid circular motion
Temporal errors: Researchers should stop studying the flash-lag effect
Exploring the extent to which shared mechanisms contribute to motion-position illusions
The Hemisphere-specific Processing Linking Visual Perception to Cognition
Evolution and adoption of contributor role ontologies and taxonomies
Questionable Research Practices and Open Science in Quantitative Criminology
Attending to Moving Objects
The transparency of quantitative empirical legal research published in highly ranked law journals (2018–2020): an observational study
Multiple object tracking
Taxonomy of interventions at academic institutions to improve research quality
Learning and retention of new symbolic representations of number
Rotation-tolerant representations elucidate the time-course of high-level object processing
Where Are the Self-Correcting Mechanisms in Science?
Ad hominem rhetoric in scientific psychology
Tenzing and the importance of tool development for research efficiency
A billion-dollar donation: estimating the cost of researchers’ time spent on peer review
The Rationality of Near Bias toward both Future and Past Events
A dynamic noise background reveals perceptual motion extrapolation: The twinkle-goes illusion
A critical systematic review of the Neurotracker perceptual-cognitive training tool
When Average is Over: Small N but Many Trials
Improving the Credibility of Empirical Legal Research: Practical Suggestions for Researchers, Journals and Law Schools
Overlapping neural representations for the position of visible and imagined objects
The dynamics of buffered and triggered selection from rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) streams.
Contributorship, not authorship: use CRediT to indicate who did what
Documenting contributions to scholarly articles using CRediT and tenzing
Combining The Writings Of Researchers, In Their Millions
Attention updates the perceived position of moving objects
A delay in sampling information from temporally autocorrelated visual stimuli
Independent replication of classic trials in neurosurgery: A missing validation practice
Contributorship, Not Authorship: Use CRediT to Indicate Who Did What
Farewell authors, hello contributors
Visual Attention to Sexual Stimuli in Mostly Heterosexuals
Color and Categorical Claims
On believing that time does not flow, but thinking that it seems to
Reading direction influences lateral biases in letter processing.
Temporal phenomenology: phenomenological illusion versus cognitive error
Bayesian belief updating after a replication experiment
Visual Working Memory for Letters Varies With Familiarity but Not Complexity
Implied reading direction and prioritization of letter encoding.
Holcombe Nguyen Goodbourn (in press). Implied reading direction and prioritization of letter encoding. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
Does sadness impair color perception? Flawed evidence and faulty methods [version 1; referees: 2 approved]
Introduction to a Registered Replication Report on Ego Depletion
Introduction to the Registered Replication Report: Hart & Albarracín (2011)
Reconsidering Temporal Selection in the Attentional Blink
The tactile motion aftereffect suggests an intensive code for speed in neurons sensitive to both speed and direction of motion
The tactile speed aftereffect depends on the speed of adapting motion across the skin rather than other spatiotemporal features
'Pseudoextinction': Asymmetries in simultaneous attentional selection
Sleep after practice reduces the attentional blink
Object tracking: Absence of long-range spatial interference supports resource theories
Extreme undisclosed analytical flexibility in HRV with automated p‐mining software
The Temporal Organization of Perception
Adaptation to motion presented with a tactile array
An Introduction to Registered Replication Reports at Perspectives on Psychological Science
Differences in perceptual latency estimated from judgments of temporal order, simultaneity and duration are inconsistent
How do we select multiple features? Transient costs for selecting two colors rather than one, persistent costs for color-location conjunctions
Neurocomputation and Coding in the Claustrum. Comparisons with the Pulvinar.
The claustrum's proposed role in consciousness is supported by the effect and target localization of Salvia divinorum
Rapid encoding of relationships between spatially remote motion signals
Resource demands of object tracking and differential allocation of the resource
Splitting attention reduces temporal resolution from 7 Hz for tracking one object to <3 Hz when tracking three
Visually tracking and localizing expanding and contracting objects
Blindness to a simultaneous change of all elements in a scene, unless there is a change in summary statistics
Exhausting attentional tracking resources with a single fast-moving object
Failures to bind spatially coincident features: Comment on Di Lollo
Feature-based attentional interference revealed in perceptual errors and lags
Motion information is sometimes used as an aid to the visual tracking of objects
Tactile Motion Adaptation Reduces Perceived Speed but Shows No Evidence of Direction Sensitivity
The Effect of Visual Distinctiveness on Multiple Object Tracking Performance
Perceiving spatial relations via attentional tracking and shifting
Position representations lag behind targets in multiple object tracking
Unexpected changes in direction of motion attract attention
A developmental theory of synaesthesia, with long historical roots: A comment on Hochel & Milán (2008)
Seeing slow and seeing fast: two limits on perception
Temporal binding favours the early phase of colour changes, but not of motion changes, yielding the colour-motion asynchrony illusion
Where is the moving object now? Judgments of instantaneous position show poor temporal precision (SD = 70 ms)
Visuomotor timing compensates for changes in perceptual latency
Independent, synchronous access to color and motion features
Tracking the changing features of multiple objects: Progressively poorer perceptual precision and progressively greater perceptual lag
Illusory motion reversals from unambiguous motion with visual, proprioceptive, and tactile stimuli
Mobile computation: Spatiotemporal integration of the properties of objects in motion
Position perception: Influence of motion with displacement dissociated from the influence of motion alone
Visual binding of English and Chinese word parts is limited to low temporal frequencies
Provoking the desire
Illusory motion reversal does not imply discrete processing: Reply to Rojas et al. [2]
Illusory motion reversal in tune with motion detectors
Time and the Brain: How subjective time relates to neural time
Illusory motion reversal is caused by rivalry, not by perceptual snapshots of the visual field
Attentional pursuit is faster than attentional saccade
Rapid global form binding with loss of associated colors
Improving science through online commentary
Occlusion cues resolve sudden onsets into morphing or line motion, disocclusion, and sudden materialization
Perceptual binding of letters into words is low temporal resolution
Causality and the perception of time
A dynamic but motionless cue for occlusion-and its consequences
A purely temporal transparency mechanism in the visual system
Early binding of feature pairs for visual perception
Wakes and spokes: New motion-induced brightness illusions