BiblioAlertes du 18 juillet 2006

18 juillet 2006 par Frank Arnould

French, L., Sutherland, R., & Garry, M. (2006). Discussion affects memory for true and false childhood events. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 671-680.

Frost, P., Sparrow, S., & Barry, J. (2006). Personality characteristics associated with susceptibility to false memories. American Journal of Psychology, vol. 119, n° 2, 193-204.

Gerrie, M.P., Belcher, L., & Garry, M. (2006). Mind the gap : False memories for missing aspects of an event. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 689-696. (Lire le compte rendu).

Ghetti, S., Papini, S., & Angelini, L. (2006). The development of the memorability-based strategy : Insight from a training study. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, vol. 94, n° 3, 206-228.

Gignac, G.E., & Powell, M.B. (2006). A direct examination of the nonlinear (quadratic) association between intelligence and suggestibility in children. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 617-623.

Hart, R.E., & Schooler, J.W. (2006). Increasing belief in the experience of an invasive procedure that never happened : The role of plausibility and schematicity. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 661-669. (Lire le compte rendu).

Hills, P.J., & Lewis, M.B. (2006). Reducig the own-race bias in face recognition by shifting attention. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, vol. 59, n° 6, 996-1002.

Itsukushima, Y., Nishi, M., Maruyama, M., & Takahashi, M. (2006). The effect of presentation medium of post-event information : Impact of co-witness information. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 575-581. (Lire le compte rendu).

Jelicic, M., Smeets, T., Peters, M.J.V., Candel, I., Rorselenberg, R., & Merckelbach, H. (2006). Assassination of a controversial politician : Remembering details from another non-existent film. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 591-596. (Lire le compte rendu)

Milnitsky Stein, L., & Memon, A. (2006). Testing the efficacy of the cognitive interview in a developing country. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 597-605. (Lire le compte rendu).

Morris, E.K., Laney, C., Berstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2006). Susceptibility to memory distortion : How do we decide it has occured ? American Journal of Psychology, vol. 119, n° 2, 255-274.

Naka, M., & Maki, Y. (2006). Belief and experience of memory recovery. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 649-659.

Nemeth, R.J., & Belli, R.F. (2006). The influence of schematic knowledge on contradictory versus additive misinformation : False memory for typical and atypical items. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 563-573.

Takarangi, M.K.T., Parker, S., Garry, M. (2006). Modernising the misinformation effect : The development of a new stimulus set. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 583-590.

Willcock, E., Morgan, K., & Hayne, H. (2006). Body maps do not facilitate children’s reports of touch. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n° 5, 607-615. ([Lire le compte rendu->http://psychotemoins.veille.inist.f... ?