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Original Articles

Tests of the “Carpentered World” Hypothesis by Race and Environnement in America and Zambia

Pages 83-94 | Published online: 24 Sep 2007

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Mario Carretero. (1982) El desarrollo de los procesos cognitivos: Investigaciones transculturales. Studies in Psychology 3:9, pages 49-70.
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DanielA. Wagner. (1977) Ontogeny of the Ponzo Illusion: Effects of Age, Schooling, and Environment. International Journal of Psychology 12:3, pages 161-176.
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Articles from other publishers (36)

Aline F. Cretenoud, Lukasz Grzeczkowski, Marco Bertamini & Michael H. Herzog. (2020) Individual differences in the Müller-Lyer and Ponzo illusions are stable across different contexts. Journal of Vision 20:6, pages 4.
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Preston J. Werner. (2017) A Posteriori Ethical Intuitionism and the Problem of Cognitive Penetrability. European Journal of Philosophy 25:4, pages 1791-1809.
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Aslı Şahin, Maria Bøe, Janis Terpenny & Jan Helge Bøhn. (2007) A Study to Understand Perceptual Discrepancies Using Visual Illusions and Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA). Journal of Mechanical Design 129:7, pages 744-752.
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Khader A. Baroun & Bader M. Al-Ansari. (2005) THE IMPACT OF ANXIETY AND GENDER ON PERCEIVING THE MUELLER-LYER ILLUSION. Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 33:1, pages 33-42.
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J. B. Deregowski. (2010) (Largely) unicultural psychologists in multicultural space. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 98-119.
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Donald M. Wilkie & Robert J. Wilison. (2010) Comparative cognition of spatial representation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 97-98.
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Peter Wenderoth. (2010) Cross-cultural research needs crossfertilisation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 97-97.
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R. A. Weale. (2010) Perceptions in perspective. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 96-97.
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Fons J. R. van de Vijver & Ype H. Poortinga. (2010) Cross-cultural research in perception: The missing theoretical perspective. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 95-96.
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E. Broydrick Thro. (2010) Cultural determination of picture space: The acid test. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 94-95.
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Daniel W. Smothergill. (2010) Whither cross-cultural perception?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 93-94.
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David Rose. (2010) Many a slip 'twixt external and internal representation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 93-93.
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Robert H. Pollack. (2010) Pictures, maybe; illusions, no. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 92-93.
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David Piggins. (2010) Plea for more exploration of cross-cultural cognitive space. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 91-92.
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Christopher S. Peebles. (2010) The archaeology of space: Real and representational. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 91-91.
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Harry McGurk. (2010) Real space and represented space: Crosscultural convergences. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 90-91.
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John M. Kennedy. (2010) Universals of depiction, illusion as nonpictorial, and limits to depiction. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 88-90.
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G. Jahoda. (2010) On the rationale for cross-cultural research. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 87-88.
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Tarow Indow. (2010) Picture in visual space and recognition of similarity. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 87-87.
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Timothy L. Hubbard, John C. Baird & Asir Ajmal. (2010) Different skills or different knowledge?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 86-87.
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Stephen C. Hirtle. (2010) The representation of space: In the 2/3i of the beholder. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 85-85.
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Diane F. Halpern. (2010) Things and pictures of things: Are perceptual processes invariant across cultures?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 84-85.
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Norman H. Freeman. (2010) A computational approach to picture production and consumption is needed right here. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 82-84.
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Hadyn D. Ellis. (2010) The distinction between object recognition and picture recognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 81-82.
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John Eliot. (2010) What you see isn't always what you know. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 80-81.
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Roger M. Downs. (2010) Representations of space and place: A developmental perspective. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 79-80.
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R. H. Day. (2010) Images, depth cues, and cross-cultural differences in perception. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 78-79.
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Arthur C. Danto. (2010) Variations in pictorial culture. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 77-78.
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Stantley Coren. (2010) Cross-cultural studies of visual illusions: The physiological confound. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 76-77.
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Josiane Caron-Pargue. (2010) Is pictorial space “perceived” as real space?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 75-76.
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Irving Biederman. (2010) The uncertain case for cultural effects in pictorial object recognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 74-75.
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J. B. Deregowski. (2010) Real space and represented space: Cross-cultural perspectives. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:1, pages 51-74.
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Janet Reis. (2016) Causality among Cross-Cultural Correlations: A Psychological Interpretation. Behavior Science Research 14:2, pages 71-113.
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