Publications

Found 265 results
Author Title [ Type(Asc)] Year
Journal Article
Mrazek MD, Phillips DT, Franklin MS, Broadway JM, Schooler JW.  2013.  Young & restless: Validation of the Mind-Wandering Questionnaire (MWQ) reveals disruptive impact of mind-wandering for youth. Frontiers in Psychology. 4:560.
Franklin MS, Broadway JM, Mrazek MD, Smallwood J, Schooler JW.  2013.  Window to the Wandering Mind: Pupillometry of Spontaneous Thought While Reading. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. 66(12):2289-2294.
Chin J.M., Schooler J.W..  2009.  Why do words hurt? content, process, and criterion shift accounts of verbal overshadowing European Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 20
Schooler J.W., Douglas S..  1999.  Why creativity is not like the proverbial typing monkey. Psychological Inquiry. 10(4):351-356.
Ryan R.S., Schooler J.W..  1998.  Whom do words hurt? Individual differences in susceptibility to verbal overshadowing Applied Cognitive Psychology. 12:105-125.
Loftus E.F, Banaji M., Schooler J.W, Foster R.A.  1987.  Who remembers what: Gender differences in memory. Michigan Quarterly Review. 26:64-85.
Protzko J., Schooler J.W.  2022.  Who Denigrates Today’s Youth?: The Role of Age, Implicit Theories, and Sharing the Same Negative Trait Frontiers in Psychology.
Hunt T., Ericson M., Schooler J.W..  2022.  Where’s My Consciousness-Ometer? How to Test for the Presence and Complexity of Consciousness Perspectives on Psychological Science.
Schooler J.W., Wilson T.W..  1991.  When words hurt: The disruptive effects of verbally analyzing reasons. Proceedings of the Society for Consumer Psychology. 29
Gable S.L, Hopper E.A, Schooler J.W.  2019.  When the Muses Strike: Creative Ideas of Physicists and Writers Routinely Occur During Mind Wandering. Psychological Science. 30(3):396-404.
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.
Smallwood J., McSpadden M., Schooler J.W..  2008.  When attention matters: the curious incident of the wandering mind. Memory and Cognition. 36(6):1144-1150.
Murray S., Krasich K., Schooler J.W., Seli P..  2019.  What's in a task? Complications in the study of the task-unrelated-thought (TUT) variety of mind wandering. Perspectives on Psychological Science. 15(3):572-588.
Zedelius C.M., Protzko J., Broadway J.M., Schooler J.W..  2020.  What types of daydreaming predict creativity? Laboratory and experience sampling evidence. Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts.
Protzko J., Schooler J.W..  2022.  What I didn’t grow up with is dangerous: How personal experience impacts perceptions of what corrupts today’s youth.. PsyArxiv.
Seli P., Maillet D, Schacter DL, Kane MJ, Smallwood J, Schooler JW, Smilek D.  2017.  What does (and should) “mind wandering” mean? PsyArxiv.
Creswell KG, Sayette MA, Schooler JW, Wright AGC, Pacilio LE.  2016.  Visceral States Call for Visceral Measures: Verbal Overshadowing of Hunger Ratings Across Assessment Modalities.. Assessment. 25(2):173-182.
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.
Schooler J.W..  2002.  Verbalization produces a transfer inappropriate processing shift. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 16(8):989–997.
Fallshore M, Schooler J.W.  1995.  Verbal vulnerability of perceptual expertise.. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 21(6):1608-23.
Schooler J.W., Engstler-Schooler T.Y..  1990.  Verbal overshadowing of visual memories: Some things are better left unsaid. Cognitive Psychology. 22(1):36-71.
Schooler J.W..  1989.  Varieties of memory and consciousness: Essays in Honour of Endel Tulving. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 4:536-537.

Pages