nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
Conceptually driven encoding episodes create perceptual misattributions
|
Masson, Michael E.J |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 183-210 |
artikel |
2 |
Electrophysiological evidence for dissociable processes contributing to recollection
|
Allan, Kevin |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 231-252 |
artikel |
3 |
Introduction: Fluency and remembering
|
Wolters, Gezinus |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 121-125 |
artikel |
4 |
Levels of processing and selective attention effects on encoding in memory
|
Bentin, Shlomo |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 311-341 |
artikel |
5 |
On the relationship between recognition familiarity and perceptual fluency: Evidence for distinct mnemonic processes
|
Wagner, Anthony D |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 211-230 |
artikel |
6 |
Predicting the future and reconstructing the past: A Bayesian characterization of the utility of subjective fluency
|
Benjamin, Aaron S |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 267-290 |
artikel |
7 |
Subjective reports and process dissociation: Fluency, knowing, and feeling
|
Kelley, Colleen M |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 127-140 |
artikel |
8 |
The influence of attention at encoding on direct and indirect remembering
|
MacDonald, Penny A |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 291-310 |
artikel |
9 |
The relationship between remembering and knowing: A cognitive neuroscience perspective
|
Knowlton, Barbara J |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 253-265 |
artikel |
10 |
What is the mechanism for fluency in successive recognition?
|
Poldrack, Russell A |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 167-181 |
artikel |
11 |
Why do strangers feel familiar, but friends don't? A discrepancy-attribution account of feelings of familiarity
|
Whittlesea, Bruce W.A. |
|
|
98 |
2-3 |
p. 141-165 |
artikel |