All Stories

  1. The evolution of conscious sensations, implicit inferences, and self-consciousness, from the standpoint of double-aspect naturalism.
  2. Testing the theoretical position that subconscious phenomena are conscious but not self-conscious.
  3. Source monitoring as an explanation for the illusion of “self as subject”.
  4. Expanded team of associate editors and inauguration of registered reports.
  5. The causal effects of painful qualia: A mind–body thesis and supportive evidence.
  6. Confronting Death Through Mental and Artistic Imagery
  7. Hypnosis And Imagination
  8. On the Evolution of Conscious Sensation, Conscious Imagination, and Consciousness of Self
  9. Existential Authenticity
  10. A Personal Note to Our Readers
  11. Psychological Subscales of Liberalism and Conservatism as Related to Political Party, Race, Education, Religion, Geographical Region, and Gender
  12. The Core Metaphysical Foundations of Christian Conservatism and Areligious Liberalism Versus the Reversible Moral Perspectives of Areligious Conservatism and Christian Liberalism
  13. Individual Differences in Deductive Logic, Abductive Logic, and Cognitive Styles
  14. Forced-Choice False Recognition Controlling for Response Bias Correlates With Dissociative Amnesia Controlling for Imagery, but Not With Image Vividness Controlling for Dissociation
  15. Differing Psychological Definitions of Liberalism and Conservatism: Their Statistical Association with Personality and with Racism
  16. Heterarchical versus Hierarchical Modes of Imageless Thinking
  17. Phenomenal yellow from rotated red and green: Retinal qualia versus emergent cortical qualia.
  18. The Primary Attachment Style Questionnaire: A Brief Measure for Assessing Six Primary Attachment Styles before and after Age Twelve
  19. “Imageless” Spatial and Temporal Rules Can Be Tested and Refined by Constructing Vivid Visual and Auditory Images
  20. Differentiating Falsely Recognized Faces from Incompletely Remembered Faces
  21. Depression, unlike Normal Sadness, is Associated with a “Flatter” Self-Perception and a “Flatter” Phenomenal World
  22. Multiple Styles of Self-Control Predict College Students' Alcohol Consumption
  23. Binocular Perception of an Abstract Multicolored Display through One Red-Filtered Eye and One Green-Filtered Eye
  24. Do Psychologically Autonomous Individuals Behave as if they Have Free Will?
  25. Should Visual Images Be Defined as Depictive Neural Patterns,oras Conscious Sensations Constructed from “Imageless” Visual Thoughts?
  26. Does Existential Meaning Require Hope, or is Interest Enough?
  27. The Archaic Belief in Dream Visitations as it Relates to “Seeing Ghosts,” “Meeting the Lord,” as Well as “Encountering Extraterrestrials”
  28. The Sense of Self in Lucid Dreams: “Self as Subject” vs. “Self as Agent” vs. “Self as Object”
  29. Dreaming and Daydreaming about Dreadful Possibilities: Primal Fears versus Existential Fears
  30. Is Binocular Fusion of “Cortical Yellow” an Illusion, Contingent upon Abstraction of Coherent Sensory Information from the Two Eyes?
  31. Universal repression from consciousness versus abnormal dissociation from self-consciousness
  32. Boundaries and Dreams
  33. The Central Image (CI) in Recent Dreams, Dreams That Stand out, and Earliest Dreams: Relationship to Boundaries
  34. The Psychological Boundaries Delineating Truth and Falsehood
  35. The Fine Line between Fantasizing Torture and Countenancing Abu Ghraib
  36. On the Cognitive Function of Visual Images and the Development of Individual Differences
  37. Reframing Cognitive Therapy to Integrate Recent Research on Emotion, Imagery, and Self-Talk
  38. Emotion Makes Daydreams More Dreamlike, More Symbolic
  39. Envisioning other Minds: The Artistic Drawing and Psychometric Rating of Images and Percepts
  40. Contextualizing images in dreams and daydreams.
  41. Is Visual Thinking “Imageless Thought”?
  42. Emotionally Directing Visual Sensations: II. Lowering the Threshold for Tinted Percepts
  43. Resolving Existential Sentiments with Music: Evidence for a “Mental Chemistry” of Emotions
  44. Emotionally Directing Visual Sensations: I. Generating Images That Contextualize Emotion and Become “Symbolic”
  45. Individual Differences in Conscious Experience
  46. Individual Differences in Self-Conscious Source Monitoring: Theoretical, Experimental, and Clinical Considerations
  47. Redefining Associative Memory, in Order to Account for the Imaginative Reconstruction of Accurate Memories
  48. Normal Dimensions of Multiple Personality without Amnesia
  49. Is Absorption a Diathesis for Dissociation in Sexually and Physically Abused Patients?
  50. Bizarreness of the dreams and daydreams reported by individuals with thin and thick boundaries.
  51. The Return of ‘The Subliminal’
  52. Dissociative Experiences and Reality-Testing Deficits in College Students
  53. Effect of Negative Imaging on Heart Rate and Blood Pressure, as a Function of Image Vividness and Image “Realness”
  54. Percepts Considered as “Bundles of Sensations”: The Confusion of Percepts with Afterimages
  55. Personality Traits and Reality-Testing Abilities, Controlling for Vividness of Imagery
  56. Repression: Active Censorship of Stressful Memories vs. Source Amnesia for Self-Consciously Dissociated Memories
  57. The Effect of Image Vividness on Reality Monitoring
  58. ‘Safe’ Fantasy: The Self-Conscious Boundary between Wishing and Willing
  59. Apperception revisited: “Subliminal” monocular perception during the apperception of fused random-dot stereograms
  60. Dissociation in Ambidextrous Students
  61. Self-Awareness in Autistic Subjects and Deeply Hypnotized Subjects: Dissociation of Self-Concept versus Self-Consciousness
  62. Subliminal Activation of Intrapsychic Conflicts: Subconscious Realms of Mind vs Subconscious Processes of Mentation
  63. Posthypnotic Amnesia: Dissociation of Self-Concept or Self-Consciousness?
  64. The Causal Efficacy of Consciousness in General, Imagery in Particular: A Materialistic Perspective
  65. Imagination and Perceptual Development: Effects of Auditory Imaging on the Brainstem Evoked Potentials of Children, Adult Musicians, and Other Adults
  66. Subliminal Activation of Hypnotic Responses: Subconscious Realms of Mind Versus Subconscious Modes of Mentation
  67. Depression: A Failure to Suppress the Self-Conscious ‘Monitoring’ of Dismal Cognitions
  68. Hypnotic Attenuation of the ‘Boundaries’ between Emotional, Visual, and Auditory Sensations
  69. Are Monocular Arrays Discriminable from Binocular Arrays?
  70. Self-Consciousness as the Monitoring of Cognitive States: A Theoretical Perspective
  71. Hypnotic Hypermnesia for Subliminally Encoded Stimuli: State-Dependent Memory for “Unmonitored” Sensations
  72. Geophysical Variables and Behavior: XL. Electromagnetic Stimulation of ‘Extrasensory’ Evoked Potentials
  73. Personality and Immunity: Depressive Tendencies versus Manic and Schizophrenic Tendencies
  74. Spontaneous Post-Hypnotic Amnesia and Spontaneous Rehypnotic Recovery in Repressers
  75. Hypnotic Hallucinations as “Unmonitored” Images: An Empirical Study
  76. Repressed Fear of Inexistence and its Hypnotic Recovery in Religious Students
  77. Repression as the Monitoring and Censoring of Images: An Empirical Study
  78. Subconscious Percepts as “Unmonitored” Percepts: An Empirical Study
  79. Perception of Randomness
  80. Hypnotizability: Correlations with Daydreaming and Sleeping
  81. Better Liars Have Better Imaginations
  82. Selected features of word meaning
  83. Somatic consequences of consciousness
  84. The Relation of Imagery Vividness, Absorption, Reality Boundaries and Synesthesia to Hypnotic States and Traits
  85. Presence vs. Absence of a “Hidden Observer” during Total Deafness: The Hypnotic Illusion of Subconsciousness vs. the Imaginal Attenuation of Brainstem Evoked Potentials