Publications

Found 269 results
[ Author(Asc)] Title Type Year
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Sieck W.R., Quinn C.N., Schooler J.W..  1999.  Justification effects on the judgment of analogy. Memory and Cognition. 27(5):844-855.
Shobe K.K., Schooler J.W..  2001.  Discovering Fact and Fiction: Case-Based Analyses of Authentic and Fabricated Discovered Memories of Abuse. Recovered Memories: Seeking the Middle Ground. :95–151.
Shariff AF, Schooler J, Vohs KD.  2008.  The Hazards of Claiming to Have Solved the Hard Problem of Free Will. Are we free? Psychology and free will. :181-204.
Shariff AF, Greene JD, Karremans JC, Luguri JB, Clark CJ, Schooler JW, Baumeister RF, Vohs KD.  2014.  Free will and punishment: a mechanistic view of human nature reduces retribution.. Psychol Sci. 25(8):1563-70.
Servan-Schreiber D, Schooler J, Dew MAmanda, Carter C, Bartone P.  2006.  Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing for posttraumatic stress disorder: a pilot blinded, randomized study of stimulation type. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. 75(5):290–297.
Seli P., Kane MJ, Metzinger T., Smallwood J, Schacter DL, Maillet D, Schooler JW, Smilek D.  2018.  The Family- Resemblances Framework for Mind- Wandering Remains Well Clad. Trends in Cognitive Science.
Seli P., Maillet D, Schacter DL, Kane MJ, Smallwood J, Schooler JW, Smilek D.  2017.  What does (and should) “mind wandering” mean? PsyArxiv.
Seli P, Ralph BCW, Risko EF, Schooler JW, Schacter DL, Smilek D.  2017.  Intentionality and meta-awareness of mind wandering: Are they one and the same, or distinct dimensions? Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 24(6):1808-1818.
Seli P, Kane MJ, Smallwood J, Schacter DL, Maillet D, Schooler JW, Smilek D.  2018.  Mind-Wandering as a Natural Kind: A Family-Resemblances View.. Trends Cogn Sci. 22(6):479-490.
Schooler J.W..  1991.  Why do we forget? What can we do about it The 1991 World Book Year Book.
Schooler J.W., Fiore F.M..  1997.  Consciousness and the limits of language: You can’t always say what you think or think what you say. Scientific Approaches to Conciousness. :241-256.
Schooler J.W., Foster R.A., Loftus E.F..  1988.  Some deleterious consequences of the act of recollection. Memory and Cognition. 16(3):243-251.
Schooler J.W., Ariely D., Loewenstein G..  2003.  The pursuit and assessment of happiness can be self-defeating. The Psychology of Economic Decisions. :41-70.
Schooler J.W., Herramn D.J..  1992.  There is more to episodic memory than just episodes. Theoretical perspectives on autobiographical memory.
Schooler J.W., Loftus E.F..  1993.  Multiple mechanisms mediate individual differences in eyewitness accuracy and suggestibility. Mechanisms of Practical Cognition. :177-203.
Schooler J.W, Ohlsson S., Brooks K..  1993.  Thoughts beyond words: When language overshadows insight. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. 122(2):166-183.
Schooler J.W..  2002.  Verbalization produces a transfer inappropriate processing shift. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 16(8):989–997.
Schooler J.W..  1989.  Varieties of memory and consciousness: Essays in Honour of Endel Tulving. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 4:536-537.
Schooler J.W., Fiore S.M..  1995.  Stirring things up, Review of Gardner, H (1993) Creating Minds. Applied Cognitive Psychology. :542-543.
Schooler JW, Loftus EF.  1992.  Memory. The Encyclopedia of Science and Technology.
Schooler J.W., Douglas S..  1999.  Why creativity is not like the proverbial typing monkey. Psychological Inquiry. 10(4):351-356.
Schooler J.W..  1998.  The distinctions of false and fuzzy memories. The Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 71(2):130-143.
Schooler J.W., Dougal S..  1999.  The symbiosis of subjective and experimental approaches to intuition. Journal of Consciousness Studies. 6:280-287.
Schooler J.W..  1998.  A multiplicity of memory. Exploring. 22:4-6.
Schooler J.W., Hyman I.E..  1997.  Investigating alternative accounts of veridical and non-veridical memories of trauma: Report of the cognitive working groups. Investigating alternative accounts of veridical and non-veridical memories of trauma: Report of the cognitive working groups. :531-540.

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