Publications
Some deleterious consequences of the act of recollection. Memory and Cognition. 16(3):243-251.
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1988. Stereotype distinctiveness: How counter-stereotypic behavior shapes the self-concept. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 81(2):193-205.
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2001. Stirring things up, Review of Gardner, H (1993) Creating Minds. Applied Cognitive Psychology. :542-543.
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1995. The symbiosis of subjective and experimental approaches to intuition. Journal of Consciousness Studies. 6:280-287.
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1999. Taking charge: Characterizing the rapid development of self-regulation through intensive training. Journal of Health Psychology.
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2020. Teenagers’ Smartphone Use during Homework: An Analysis of Beliefs and Behaviors around Digital Multitasking. Education Sciences.
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2021. Thinking one thing, saying another: The behavioral correlates of mind-wandering while reading aloud. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 21(1):205-210.
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2013. Thinking too much: Introspection can reduce the quality of preferences and decisions? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 60(2):181-192.
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1991. Time went by so slowly: Overestimation of event duration by males and females. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 1(1):3-13.
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1987. Unnoticed intrusions: Dissociations of meta-consciousness in thought suppression. Consciousness and Cognition. 22(3):1003-1012.
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2013. Varieties of memory and consciousness: Essays in Honour of Endel Tulving. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 4:536-537.
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1989. Verbal overshadowing of visual memories: Some things are better left unsaid. Cognitive Psychology. 22(1):36-71.
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1990. Verbalization produces a transfer inappropriate processing shift. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 16(8):989–997.
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2002. .
2022. When attention matters: the curious incident of the wandering mind. Memory and Cognition. 36(6):1144-1150.
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2008. When words hurt: The disruptive effects of verbally analyzing reasons. Proceedings of the Society for Consumer Psychology. 29
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1991. Where’s My Consciousness-Ometer? How to Test for the Presence and Complexity of Consciousness Perspectives on Psychological Science.
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2022. Whom do words hurt? Individual differences in susceptibility to verbal overshadowing Applied Cognitive Psychology. 12:105-125.
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1998. Why creatives don’t find the oddball odd: Neural and psychological evidence for atypical salience processing. Brain and Cognition. 178
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2024. Why creativity is not like the proverbial typing monkey. Psychological Inquiry. 10(4):351-356.
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1999. Why do words hurt? content, process, and criterion shift accounts of verbal overshadowing European Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 20
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2009.