Publications

Found 33 results
Author Title Type [ Year(Desc)]
Filters: Author is Schooler, Jonathan W  [Clear All Filters]
1993
Schooler JW.  1993.  Some suggestions about suggestibility: Review of J. F. Schumaker (Ed.). Human suggestibility: Advances in theory, research, and application in Contemporary Psychology. 38:283-284.
2013
Mooneyham BW, Schooler JW.  2013.  The costs and benefits of mind-wandering: a review.. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology/Revue canadienne de psychologie expérimentale. 67(1):11-18.
2014
Mrazek MD, Broadway JM, Phillips DT, Franklin MS, Mooneyham BW, Schooler JW.  2014.  An Antidote for Wandering Minds. The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Mindfulness. :153.
Baird B, Smallwood J, Lutz A, Schooler JW.  2014.  The Decoupled Mind: Mind-wandering Disrupts Cortical Phase-locking to Perceptual Events. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 26(11):2596-2607.
Baird B, Mrazek MD, Phillips DT, Schooler JW.  2014.  Domain-specific enhancement of metacognitive ability following meditation training.. J Exp Psychol Gen. 143(5):1972-9.
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.
Franklin MS, Baumgart SL, Schooler JW.  2014.  Future directions in precognition research: more research can bridge the gap between skeptics and proponents.. Front Psychol. 5:907.
Mrazek MD, Mooneyham BW, Schooler JW.  2014.  Insights from Quiet Minds: The Converging Fields of Mindfulness and Mind-Wandering. Meditation–Neuroscientific Approaches and Philosophical Implications. :227–241.
Schooler JW.  2014.  Metascience could rescue the 'replication crisis'.. Nature. 515(7525):9.
Franklin MS, Mooneyham BW, Baird B, Schooler JW.  2014.  Thinking one thing, saying another: The behavioral correlates of mind-wandering while reading aloud. Psychonomic bulletin & review. 21:205–210.
Franklin MS, Mrazek MD, Anderson CL, Johnston C, Smallwood J, Kingstone A, Schooler JW.  2014.  Tracking Distraction: The Relationship Between Mind-Wandering, Meta-Awareness, and ADHD Symptomatology. Journal of attention disorders. 21(6):475-486.
Schooler JW.  2014.  Turning the Lens of Science on Itself Verbal Overshadowing, Replication, and Metascience. Perspectives on Psychological Science. 9(5):579–584.
Brown C, Brandimonte MA, Wickham LHV, Bosco A, Schooler JW.  2014.  When do words hurt? A multiprocess view of the effects of verbalization on visual memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 40(5):1244-1256.
2015
Broadway JM, Franklin MS, Schooler JW.  2015.  Early event-related brain potentials and hemispheric asymmetries reveal mind-wandering while reading and predict comprehension. Biological psychology. 107:31–43.
Broadway JM, Zedelius CM, Schooler JW, Grondin S.  2015.  The Long and Short of Mental Time Travel: An Overview. Frontiers in Psychology. 6:668.
Zedelius CM, Schooler JW.  2015.  Mind wandering “Ahas” versus mindful reasoning: alternative routes to creative solutions. Frontiers in psychology. 6:834.
Schooler JW, Mrazek MD, Baird B, Winkielman P.  2015.  Minding the mind: the value of distinguishing among unconscious, conscious, and metaconscious processes. APA handbooks in psychology. APA handbook of personality and social psychology. 1:179–202.
Zedelius CM, Broadway JM, Schooler JW.  2015.  Motivating meta-awareness of mind wandering: A way to catch the mind in flight? Consciousness and cognition. 36:44–53.
Baird B, Cieslak M, Smallwood J, Grafton ST, Schooler JW.  2015.  Regional White Matter Variation Associated with Domain-specific Metacognitive Accuracy. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. 27(3):440-452.
Smallwood J, Schooler JW.  2015.  The science of mind wandering: empirically navigating the stream of consciousness. Annual review of psychology. 66(1):487–518.
Broadway JM, Zedelius CM, Mooneyham BW, Mrazek MD, Schooler JW.  2015.  Stimulating minds to wander. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112(11):3182–3183.
Franklin MS, Smallwood J, Zedelius CM, Broadway JM, Schooler JW.  2015.  Unaware yet reliant on attention: Experience sampling reveals that mind-wandering impedes implicit learning. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 23(1):223-229.
Casner SM, Schooler JW.  2015.  Vigilance impossible: diligence, distraction, and daydreaming all lead to failures in a practical monitoring task. Consciousness and cognition. 35:33–41.

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