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Original Articles

Memory discrimination for self-performed and imagined acts: Bizarreness effects in false recognition

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Pages 49-67 | Published online: 22 Oct 2010

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Read on this site (5)

MelanieC. Steffens, Petra Jelenec & Silvia Mecklenbräuker. (2009) Decomposing the memory processes contributing to enactment effects by multinomial modelling. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 21:1, pages 61-83.
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Melanie C. Steffens, Petra Jelenec, Silvia Mecklenbräuker & Erin Marie Thompson. (2006) Decomposing retrieval and integration in memory for actions: A multinomial modeling approach. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 59:3, pages 557-576.
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JenniferA. Mangels & Aileen Heinberg. (2006) Improved Episodic Integration Through Enactment: Implications for Aging. The Journal of General Psychology 133:1, pages 37-65.
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JamesB. Worthen, JeffreyD. Baker, ScottA. Hutchens & PaulD. Nicodemus. (2002) Memory for Frequency of Bizarre and Common Stimuli: Limitations of the Automaticity Hypothesis. The Journal of General Psychology 129:3, pages 212-225.
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JamesB. Worthen & LauraS. Eller. (2002) Test of Competing Explanations of the Bizarre Response Bias in Recognition Memory. The Journal of General Psychology 129:1, pages 36-48.
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Articles from other publishers (4)

Benjamin Straube, Lea Meyer, Antonia Green & Tilo Kircher. (2014) Semantic relation vs. surprise: The differential effects of related and unrelated co-verbal gestures on neural encoding and subsequent recognition. Brain Research 1567, pages 42-56.
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Katinka Dijkstra & Eelco M. Moerman. (2012) Effects of modality on memory for original and misleading information. Acta Psychologica 140:1, pages 58-63.
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James B. Worthen & Joseph D. Deschamps. (2008) Humour mediates the facilitative effect of bizarreness in delayed recall. British Journal of Psychology 99:4, pages 461-471.
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James B. Worthen, Sarah A. Eisenstein, Siobhan C. Budwey & Paula Varnado-Sullivan. (2016) Tests of Structural Hypotheses in Free Recall of Bizarre and Common Dream Reports: Implications for Sleep Research. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 24:4, pages 315-330.
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