Publications

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Found 11 results
Author Title [ Type(Asc)] Year
Filters: Author is Ashby, F Gregory and First Letter Of Title is D  [Clear All Filters]
Journal Article
Ell, S. W., & F Ashby G. (2004).  Dynamical trajectories in category learning. Perception & Psychophysics. 66(8), 1318-1340.
F Ashby, G., Queller S., & Berretty P. M. (1999).  On the dominance of unidimensional rules in unsupervised categorization. Perception & Psychophysics. 61, 1178–1199.
W Maddox, T., & F Ashby G. (2004).  Dissociating explicit and procedural-learning based systems of perceptual category learning. Behavioral Processes. 66(3), 309-332.
W Maddox, T., F Ashby G., A Ing D., & Pickering A. D. (2004).  Disrupting feedback processing interferes with rule-based but not information-integration category learning. Memory & Cognition. 32(4), 582-591.
F Ashby, G. (1982).  Deriving exact predictions from the cascade model. Psychological Review. 89, 599 607.
W Maddox, T., F Ashby G., & Bohil C. J. (2003).  Delayed feedback effects on rule-based and information-integration category learning. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory & Cognition. 29(4), 650-662.
J Smith, D., Boomer J., Zakrzewski A. C., Roeder J. L., Church B. A., & F Ashby G. (2014).  Deferred feedback sharply dissociates implicit and explicit category learning. Psychological Science. 25(2), 447-457.
Mumford, J. A., Turner B. O., F Ashby G., & Poldrack R. A. (2012).  Deconvolving BOLD activation in event-related designs for multivoxel pattern classification analyses. NeuroImage. 59(3), 2636-2643.
F Ashby, G., & Townsend J. T. (1980).  Decomposing the reaction time distribution: Pure insertion and selective influence revisited. Journal of Mathematical Psychology. 21, 93–123.
F Ashby, G., & Gott R. E. (1988).  Decision rules in the perception and categorization of multidimensional stimuli. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 14, 33.
F Ashby, G., W Maddox T., & W Lee W. (1994).  On the dangers of averaging across subjects when using multidimensional scaling or the similarity-choice model. Psychological Science. 5, 144–151.