References
- Berto, F. J. (2017). Bicycle. In Encyclopedia britannica. Retrieved from https://www.britannica.com/technology/bicycle
- Björklund, L. (2008). The repertory grid technique: Making tacit knowledge explicit:Assessing creative work and problem solving skills. In H. Middleton (ed.), Researching technology education: Methods and Techniques (pp. 46-69). Sense Publishers. ISBN 978-90-8790-260-5.
- Bloch, P. H. (2011). Product design and marketing: Reflections after fifteen years. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 28(3), 378–380.
- Chandon, P., Hutchinson, J. W., Bradlow, E. T., & Young, S. H. (2009). Does in-store marketing work? Effects of the number and position of shelf facings on brand attention and evaluation at the point of purchase. Journal of Marketing, 73(6), 1–17.
- Chen, L. (1982). Topological structure in visual perception. Science, 218(4573), 699–700.
- Chen, L. (2005). The topological approach to perceptual organization. Visual Cognition, 12(4), 553–637.
- Dodwell, P. C. (1983). The lie transformation group model of visual perception. Perception & Psychophysics, 34(1), 1–16.
- Easterby-Smith, M. (1980). The design, analysis and interpretation of repertory grids. International Journal of Man-Machine Studies, 13(1), 3–24.
- Easterby-Smith, M., Thorpe, R., & Holman, D. (1996). Using repertory grids in management. Journal of European Industrial Training, 20(3), 3–30.
- Griskevicius, V., & Kenrick, D. T. (2013). Fundamental motives: How evolutionary needs influence consumer behavior. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 23(3), 372–386.
- Hill, K., Wittkowski, A., Hodgkinson, E., Bell, R., & Hare, D. J. (2016). Using the repertory grid technique to examine trainee clinical psychologists’ construal of their personal and professional development. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 23(5), 425–437.
- Kisil, V. V. (2012). Erlangen program at large: An overview. In Advances in applied analysis (pp. 1–94). Basel: Birkhäuser.
- Kruglanski, A. W., & Gigerenzer, G. (2011). Intuitive and Deliberate Judgments Are Based on Common Principles. Psychological Review, 118(1), 97–109.
- Luchs, M., & Swan, K. S. (2011). Perspective: The emergence of product design as a field of marketing inquiry. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 28(3), 327–345.
- Nagai, Y., Georgiev, G. V., & Zhou, F. (2011). A methodology to analyse in-depth impressions of design on the basis of concept networks. Journal of Design Research, 9(1), 44–64.
- Navon, D. (1977). Forest before trees: The precedence of global features in visual perception. Cognitive Psychology, 9(3), 353–383.
- Palmer, S. E. (1999). Vision science: Photons to phenomenology. Cambridge, MA: MIT press.
- Pieters, R., Wedel, M., & Batra, R. (2010). The stopping power of advertising: Measures and effects of visual complexity. Journal of Marketing, 74(5), 48–60.
- Pomerantz, J. R., Sager, L. C., & Stoever, R. J. (1977). Perception of wholes and of their component parts: Some configural superiority effects. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 3(3), 422.
- Rock, I. (1986). The description and analysis of object and event perception. In K. R. Boff, L. Kaufman, & J. P. Thomas (Eds.), Handbook of perception and human performance, vol. 2. cognitive processes and performance (pp. 1–71).
- Rucker, D. D., Galinsky, A. D., & Dubois, D. (2012). Power and consumer behavior: How power shapes who and what consumers value. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 22(3), 352–368.
- Sperling, G., & Weichselgartner, E. (1995). Episodic theory of the dynamics of spatial attention. Psychological Review, 102(3), 503.
- Treisman, A. M., & Gelade, G. (1980). A feature-integration theory of attention. Cognitive Psychology, 12(1), 97–136.