All Stories

  1. A Possible Correction of the Face Inversion Effect: A Methodological Commentary
  2. Explaining the face-inversion effect: the face–scheme incompatibility (FSI) model
  3. Cognitive Processing of Scrambled Faces
  4. A feature-inversion effect: can an isolated feature show behavior like the face-inversion effect?
  5. Psychology as an Associational Science: A Methodological Viewpoint
  6. Is Facial Beauty an Innate Response to the Leonardian Proportion?
  7. To Understand a Cat
  8. Where Is Research Heading?
  9. Experimental Psychology and Duhem's Problem
  10. Featural vs. configurational information in faces: A conceptual and empirical analysis
  11. Face Recognition
  12. Explanation
  13. The Deductive-Reconstruction Method and the Catch Model: Methodological and Explanatory Features
  14. Thompson's Margaret Thatcher Illusion: When Inversion Fails
  15. A COHERENT ACCOUNT OF HUMAN BEHAVIOR: THE MULTIEXPLANATION-MODEL THEORY
  16. SIMULATING JOHN SEARLE IN THE CHINESE ROOM
  17. THE FACIAL INVERSION EFFECTS: THE FEATURAL VS. THE CONFIGURATIONAL HYPOTHESES
  18. The computer that simulated John Searle in the Chinese Room
  19. The Catch model: a solution to the problem of saliency in facial features
  20. Facial inversion effects: Parts and whole relationship
  21. The place of consciousness in the information processing approach: The mental-pool thought experiment
  22. Consciousness Explained?
  23. Theories of mind: Some methodological/conceptual problems and an alternative approach
  24. Empirical criteria for task susceptibility to introspective awareness and awareness effects
  25. Outflanking the mind-body problem: Scientific progress in the history of psychology
  26. Tallying the “tally argument”: What next?
  27. The prediction of event frequency: The frequency-learning, confidence-matching, and subjective-probability distribution hypotheses
  28. To catch a thief with a recognition test: The model and some empirical results
  29. Latent avoidance learning: Positive transfer from barpress to shuttle avoidance and vice versa
  30. Breaking the myth that behaviorism is a trivial science
  31. Avoidance theory: The nature of innate responses and their interaction with acquired responses
  32. Hypothesizing from Introspections: A Model for the Role of Mental Entities in Psychological Explanation
  33. Individual trauma and national response to external threat: The case of Israel
  34. Role of intertrial interval following an escape or avoidance response in bar-press avoidance
  35. Generalization from analogue therapy to the clinical situation: The paradox and the dilemma of generality.
  36. Fish (Tilapia aurea), as Rats, Learn Shuttle Better than Lever-Bumping (Press) Avoidance Tasks: A Suggestion for Functionally Similar Universal Reactions to a Conditioned Fear-Arousing Stimulus
  37. One or two different sets of laws of learning—Is this an empirical question?
  38. Voluntary Forgetting of the First or Second Occurrence of an Item in Free Recall and Recognition Tasks
  39. Does interpolated interference affect only the short-term store in a free recall task?
  40. Voluntary Forgetting: The Effect of Items to Be Remembered on Those to Be Forgotten
  41. Effect of Discriminative Cues and Time Interval on Tolerance of Pain as a Measure of Fear
  42. Inhibitory Effect of a Second Stimulus on Reaction Time to a Primary Stimulus: A Partial Successful Replication
  43. Tolerance of pain as a measure of fear
  44. Voluntary forgetting before and after learning has been accomplished
  45. Serial learning and filled and unfilled delay intervals: Effects of informative feedback contingencies
  46. Heart rate accelerations as a function of anticipation time for task performance and reward.
  47. Dissociation between confidence in a prediction and the success of the prediction
  48. The effect of instructional set on hypotheses and behavior in concept formation
  49. The Prediction of Behavior from Verbal Hypotheses Under Two Instructional Sets
  50. Configural Processing Hypothesis and Face-Inversion Effect