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Original Articles

Concreteness effects revisited: The influence of dynamic visual noise on memory for concrete and abstract words

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Pages 397-410 | Received 09 Aug 2008, Published online: 08 Apr 2009

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Read on this site (10)

Benjamin A. Anderson & Scott A. Peterson. (2022) Concreteness and levels of processing: a test of the dual-coding hypothesis using dynamic visual noise. Memory 30:10, pages 1405-1420.
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Andrew Parker, Adam Parkin & Neil Dagnall. (2022) Eye-closure effects and the influence of short-term storage and processing capacity on episodic memory. Memory 30:8, pages 1018-1030.
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Philip Morgan, Bill Macken, Alexander Toet, Aline Bompas, Mark Bray, Simon Rushton & Dylan Jones. (2020) Distraction for the eye and ear. Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science 21:6, pages 633-657.
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Lucas J. Hamilton & Eric S. Allard. (2020) Words matter: age-related positivity in episodic memory for abstract but not concrete words. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition 27:4, pages 595-616.
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Chrissy M. Chubala, Tyler M. Ensor, Ian Neath & Aimée M. Surprenant. (2020) Dynamic visual noise affects ill-defined, not well-defined, images. Memory 28:1, pages 112-127.
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Judit Castellà & Guillermo Campoy. (2018) The (lack of) effect of dynamic visual noise on the concreteness effect in short-term memory. Memory 26:10, pages 1355-1363.
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Andrew Parker, Timothy Kember & Neil Dagnall. (2017) Reduced effects of pictorial distinctiveness on false memory following dynamic visual noise. Memory 25:6, pages 845-855.
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Signy Sheldon, Robert Amaral & Brian Levine. (2017) Individual differences in visual imagery determine how event information is remembered. Memory 25:3, pages 360-369.
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Taiji Ueno & Satoru Saito. (2013) The role of visual representations within working memory for paired-associate and serial order of spoken words. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 66:9, pages 1858-1872.
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Articles from other publishers (11)

Hye Jin An & Jee Eun Sung. (2022) Age-related Differences in Word Recognition Tasks according to Visual Interference and Noun Imagery. Communication Sciences & Disorders 27:2, pages 313-329.
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Sina Koller, Nadine Müller & Christina Kauschke. (2022) The Elephant in the Room: A Systematic Review of Stimulus Control in Neuro-Measurement Studies on Figurative Language Processing. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
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Alison Whiteford-Damerall. (2021) The Visual Working Memory Demands of Processing Conventional Metaphoric Language. The American Journal of Psychology 134:1, pages 13-29.
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Chrissy M. Chubala, Tyler M. Ensor, Ian Neath & Aimée M. Surprenant. (2020) Dynamic Visual Noise Does Not Affect Memory for Fonts. Experimental Psychology 67:3, pages 161-168.
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Rudy Purkart, Rémy Versace & Guillaume T. Vallet. (2019) “Does It Improve the Mind’s Eye?”: Sensorimotor Simulation in Episodic Event Construction. Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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Chrissy Chubala, Aimée M. Surprenant, Ian Neath & Philip T. Quinlan. (2018) Does dynamic visual noise eliminate the concreteness effect in working memory?. Journal of Memory and Language 102, pages 97-114.
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Pamela J. L. Rae & Timothy J. Perfect. (2014) Visual distraction during word-list retrieval does not consistently disrupt memory. Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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Christian Michel Lachaud. (2013) Conceptual metaphors and embodied cognition: EEG coherence reveals brain activity differences between primary and complex conceptual metaphors during comprehension. Cognitive Systems Research 22-23, pages 12-26.
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Cesar Galera, Ricardo Basso Garcia & Rafael Vasques. (2013) Componentes funcionais da memória visuoespacial. Estudos Avançados 27:77, pages 29-44.
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Jordan Randell, Megha Goyal, Jo Saunders & Phil Reed. (2011) Effect of a context of concrete and abstract words on hallucinatory content in individuals scoring high in schizotypy. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry 42:2, pages 149-153.
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Masahiro TAKAMURA & Makoto MIYATANI. (2010) The effect of dynamic visual noise on event-related potential component reflecting concrete word processing. Japanese Journal of Physiological Psychology and Psychophysiology 28:3, pages 209-218.
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