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2014 clifford t. morgan best article awards PDF

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General Information OPENING SESSION/KEYNOTE ADDRESS Looking Back: Noticing and Recollecting Change Larry Jacoby, Washington University in St. Louis Thursday, November 20, 8:00 p.m., Regency Ballroom 2014 EARLY CAREER AWARDS Michael N. Jones, Indiana University Tania Lombrozo, University of California, Berkeley Katherine Rawson, Kent State University Jessica K. Witt, Colorado State University WELCOME RECEPTION Thursday, November 20, immediately following the Keynote Address, Regency Ballroom Foyer Hosted by: Psychonomic Society Governing Board TABLE OF CONTENTS General Information .......................................................................................................................................................................................ii Map of Meeting Space ....................................................................................................................................................................................v 2014 Early Career Awards .............................................................................................................................................................................vi 2014 Member Select-Speaker Awards ........................................................................................................................................................vii 2014 Clifford T. Morgan Best Article Awards ..........................................................................................................................................viii Condensed Schedule A, sessions by time .................................................................................................................................................xiii Condensed Schedule B, sessions by room ................................................................................................................................................xvi Condensed Schedule C, abstracts by time ..............................................................................................................................................xviii Spoken Sessions, Friday morning .................................................................................................................................................................1 Spoken Sessions, Friday afternoon .............................................................................................................................................................15 Spoken Sessions, Saturday morning ...........................................................................................................................................................29 Spoken Sessions, Saturday afternoon .........................................................................................................................................................44 Business Meeting ...........................................................................................................................................................................................56 Spoken Sessions, Sunday morning .............................................................................................................................................................57 Poster Session I, Thursday evening .............................................................................................................................................................73 Poster Session II, Friday noon ...................................................................................................................................................................115 Poster Session III, Friday evening .............................................................................................................................................................157 Poster Session IV, Saturday noon ..............................................................................................................................................................201 Poster Session V, Saturday evening ...........................................................................................................................................................243 Author Index ...............................................................................................................................................................................................287 Keyword Index ............................................................................................................................................................................................305 NOTICES • Designation of Psychonomic Society Early Career Award Winners: An asterisk (*) preceding an author’s name indicates that he/she is a recipient of the Psychonomic Society’s Early Career Award for 2014. i General Information HOTELS TRAVEL TO LONG BEACH The Hyatt Regency Long Beach will serve as our headquarters Airports: hotel. All sessions for the 2014 Psychonomic Society Annual • Long Beach Airport (LGB) and the Hyatt Regency Long Meeting will be held at the Hyatt, with the exception of poster Beach (approximately 6 miles) sessions. All poster sessions will be held just a short distance • Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) and the Hyatt from the hotel at the Long Beach Convention Center. With the Regency Long Beach (approximately 22 miles) exception of SJDM, which will be meeting at the Westin Long • John Wayne Airport (SNA) and the Hyatt Regency Long Beach, all affiliate meetings will be held at the Hyatt. Beach (approximately 24 miles) There are a limited number of rooms available at the Hyatt, Parking: so please book early to secure your sleeping room. The • Hyatt Regency Hotel: $24 per night for both self-parking Psychonomic Society also has negotiated conference rates and valet parking at the nearby Renaissance Long Beach Hotel and the Westin • Westin Hotel: $18 per night for self-parking/$21 per Long Beach Hotel. To maintain our practice of no registration night for valet parking fee, it is essential that all rooms reserved for the Annual Meeting • Renaissance Hotel: $18 per night for self-parking/$23 be identified as such at the time of booking. To assure you per night for valet parking receive the specially negotiated room rate of $179 + tax per night at each hotel, please make your reservations no later Shuttle Service: than October 29, 2014. Visit www.psychonomic.org/hotels to We have negotiated special discounts with Prime Time Shuttle make reservations. for attendees to and from the airports. Here are three ways to book a reservation: REGISTRATION   1. Call 800-733-8267 and press 1 for reservations; provide Registration is free for attendees and will be located at the the discount code 612000. Hyatt Regency in the lobby, near the registration desk at the 2. Visit www.primetimeshuttle. On the left navigation bar, following times: enter the discount code 612000 where it says Frequent Rider ID. Thursday, November 20 ..................10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 3. Use the personalized portal link: Friday, November 21..........................7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. http://primetimeshuttle.hudsonltd.net/ Saturday, November 22 .....................7:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. res?USERIDENTRY=612000&LOGON=GO To avoid lines on site, you are strongly encouraged to preregister through the Psychonomic Society Web site, TAXIS www.psychonomic.org. Click on the “Annual Meeting” link, then “Registration” to access the online registration form. If Taxis are available at all three airports. They cost approximately you choose not to preregister, please visit the PS Registration $63 from LAX and SNA, but could be higher based on rush Desk on the Hyatt Regency lobby level when you arrive in hour/traffic. Taxis from LGB will run around $30. Please allow Long Beach and complete a registration form so the Society 2-3 hours travel time from LAX during rush hour. can obtain an accurate count of attendees. PROGRAMS MEETING ROOMS Programs will be available in print, a pdf on psychonomic.org, All meeting rooms for spoken papers are located in the Hyatt and a mobile app (free download at the Apple App Store and Regency Long Beach: Google Play Store). All versions include the full program as well as a list of posters. • Regency Ballroom A-C, D-F, H (Fourth Floor) • Beacon Ballroom A, B (Fourth Floor) • Seaview Ballroom A & B (First Floor) • Shoreline (First Floor) Session Chairs are encouraged to solicit papers from individuals in their sessions prior to the meeting and load presentations onto the laptop computer in the meeting room. This will save time. ii General Information POSTER SESSIONS RECEPTIONS All poster sessions will take place at the Long Beach On Thursday, November 20, there will be a general reception Convention Center in the Grand Ballroom on Level 2. Use with a cash bar between 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. in the of the space at the convention center must be paid for by the Regency Ballroom Foyer at the Hyatt Regency. A cash bar will Society. To help pay this cost, an $8 per night rebate from each be held at the Long Beach Convention Center with the poster room night paid by attendees will be applied toward the rental session from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Friday, and from 5:30 of the convention center. The three evening sessions will be p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Saturday in the Grand Ballroom, Level 2. held in conjunction with the general reception. Authors of Note that the reception is combined with the poster session on posters are asked to make their posters available for viewing Friday and Saturday evening. on the following schedule: COFFEE BREAKS Session Viewing Time Author Present Complimentary coffee and tea will be available from 7:30 a.m. Thursday Evening 4:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. to 9:00 a.m. each morning near the registration area. Friday Noon 10:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m. 12:00 noon–1:30 p.m. Friday Evening 4:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. PSYCHONOMIC TIME Saturday Noon 10:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m. 12:00 noon–1:30 p.m. Persons chairing sessions this year will be asked to keep the Saturday Evening 4:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. spoken papers schedule on times standardized against a clock at the Psychonomic registration desk. All attendees are asked NOTE: The size of the posters is 4 ft. x 4 ft. to accommodate to synchronize their watches with Psychonomic time. all of the submissions. This means that you will be sharing an 8  ft. x 4 ft. board with another presenter. Please plan AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT FOR TALKS accordingly. Visit www.psychonomic.org/posters for suggestions on preparing your poster. LCD projectors (e.g., for PowerPoint presentations) will be provided in all rooms where spoken sessions are scheduled. We have extended viewing times so all interested attendees Laptop computers will be provided in each meeting room. can see the posters of their choice and reduce the crowded Please bring your presentation on a USB drive and load it conditions that at times occur during the poster sessions. As onto the laptop computer in your session room prior to the usual, the author(s) are required to be present only during the beginning of that session. Please bring two copies of your official times shown in the program. Posters should be taken presentation in case of media failure. (Slide projector and down at the end of the actual session. Please do NOT leave overhead projectors will not be provided unless the speaker your poster behind at the end of the session. The Psychonomic has specifically requested such equipment.) Society cannot be responsible for poster presentations that are left on the poster boards after the session is over. THE 2014 PROGRAM The numbering of posters this year uses the same system as There were 1,300 submissions. Of the 1,299 papers that were last year. Abstract numbers assigned to posters are not in placed on the program, 299 are spoken papers and 1,000 are sequence with the numbers assigned to talks. Rather, each posters. In addition, there are 4 Invited Symposia. poster is assigned a four-digit abstract number. The first digit codes the session to which the poster has been assigned; the PROGRAM HISTORY last three digits code the location of the poster within its session (i.e., 001-200). Year – Site Submissions Accepted EXHIBITORS 2013 – Toronto 1, 279 1,264 2012 – Minneapolis 1,066 1,054 Attendees are encouraged to visit our exhibitors located at the Hyatt Regency in the Regency Ballroom Foyer, on the fourth 2011 – Seattle 1,046 1,037 floor. Exhibit hours are: 2010 – St. Louis 928 928 2009 – Boston 1,230 1,220 Thursday, November 20 .................7:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.     Friday, November 21..........................9:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.     2008 – Chicago 1,040 950 Saturday, November 22 .....................9:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. 2007 – Long Beach 936 928   2006 – Houston 905 883 2005 – Toronto 966 940 iii General Information 2014 AFFILIATE MEETINGS PROGRAM AND CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION • Auditory Perception, Cognition, and Action (APCAM) 13th Annual Meeting The Secretary/Treasurer, Ruth Maki, has the responsibility Thursday, November 20, 2014 for organizing the program, and the Convention Manager, 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Andrew Conway, has the responsibility for arranging facilities Regency Ballroom H, Hyatt Regency Long Beach at the meeting. They do so with the indispensable help of Lou www.apcam.us  Shomette, Executive Director of the Society; Peggy O’Brien, • Comparative Cognition Society (CCS) our meeting planner; Linda Potchoiba, our registrar; Kathy Keynote Speaker: John Wixted, University of California- Kuehn, our production director; Jess Goedken, our graphic San Diego artist; and John Hofmann, our IT and production guru. Thursday, November 20, 2014  8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETY Regency Ballroom B, Hyatt Regency Long Beach www.comparativecognition.org Chair Jeremy M. Wolfe, Brigham and Women’s Hospital • Configural Processing Consortium (CPC) & Harvard Medical School Wednesday, November 19, 2014 Past Chair Helene Intraub, 8:30 a.m – 5:00 p.m. University of Delaware Seaview Ballroom, Hyatt Regency Long Beach Chair-Elect Robert Logie, www.configural.org University of Edinburgh • International Association for Metacognition (IAM) Secretary/Treasurer Ruth Maki, Thursday, November 20, 2014 University of Arizona (2011-2016) 12:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Beacon Ballroom A, Hyatt Regency Long Beach 2014 GOVERNING BOARD • Object Perception, Attention and Memory (OPAM) 22nd Annual Workshop • Jeremy M. Wolfe, Brigham and Women’s Hospital & Keynote Speaker: Dr. Aude Oliva, Massachusetts Institute Harvard Medical School of Technology • Helene Intraub, University of Delaware Thursday, November 20, 2014 • Robert Logie, University of Edinburgh 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. • Michael C. Anderson, University of Cambridge Regency Ballroom A, Hyatt Regency Long Beach • Teresa Bajo, University of Granada www.opam.net • Aaron Benjamin, University of Illinois • Colin M. MacLeod, University of Waterloo • Society for Computers in Psychology (SCiP) • Janet Metcalfe, Columbia University Thursday, November 20, 2014 • Cathleen Moore, University of Iowa 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. • Lynne Reder, Carnegie Mellon University Seaview Ballroom, Hyatt Regency Long Beach • Patricia Reuter-Lorenz, University of Michigan www.scip.ws • Valerie Reyna, Cornell University • Society for Judgment and Decision Making Annual • Ruth H. Maki, University of Arizona, ex officio Meeting (SJDM) Friday, Saturday, Sunday, & Monday, November 21-24, 2014 The names of two members elected to the Governing Board Centennial Ballroom, Westin Long Beach for 2015-2020 will be announced at the Business Meeting on www.sjdm.org Saturday, November 22. • Tactile Research Group (TRG) Speakers: Farley Norman, Soledad Ballesteros, and Warren Ruth Maki, Secretary/Treasurer Grundfest Adjunct Professor, University of Arizona Thursday, November 20, 2014 2785 E. Posse Court 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Green Valley, AZ 85614 Beacon Ballroom B, Hyatt Regency Long Beach [email protected] http://trg.objectis.net/ • Women in Cognitive Science 12th Annual Meeting (WICS) Thursday, November 20, 2014 4:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Seaview Ballroom A, Hyatt Regency Long Beach womenincogsci.org iv Hotel Maps HYATT REGENCY LONG BEACH HOTEL - LOWER LEVEL (FIRST FLOOR) Harbor Pacific A B C Men Shoreline Women A B Rainbow Lagoon Seaview Corridor A BallBroom C To Hotel Tower Seaview Tides Elevator Foyer & Rotunda Restaurant Patio Dining Pool Deck Pool Whirlpool Fire Pit HYATT REGENCY LONG BEACH HOTEL - UPPER LEVEL (FOURTH FLOOR) C D A Regency Ballroom E H B F Regency Foyer Coat Room/ Women Men Office Stairs Elevator ESsctaailrast &or A Beacon Ballroom B Beacon Rotunda v 2014 Early Career Awards Michael N. Jones The Psychonomic Society Department of Psychological and Brain Science Announces the Winners of the Indiana University Cognition and Computation Nominators: Richard Shiffrin, Gary Dell 2014 Dr. Jones’ research program uniquely combines computational, experimental, and large-scale corpus methods to demonstrate how humans acquire and process semantic knowledge. His theoretical work models learning from sequential word order, statistical properties of EARLY CAREER the input, and perceptual information simultaneously. Jones’ models also can be scaled to apply to real-world problems. AWARD Tania Lombrozo Department of Psychology University of California, Berkeley Life Span Language and Cognition Nominators: William Prinzmetal, Barbara Spellman The Early Career Award recognizes Dr. Lombrozo’s research illuminates the role of explanation in cognition. Her work exceptional research accomplishments is broad and interdisciplinary, building strong connections between psychology and among our members. Nominees must philosophy. She studies causal reasoning and moral judgments, as well as preferences for teleological versus mechanistic explanations. Her have completed their terminal degree research examines these preferences throughout the life span, from (typically Ph.D.) within the last 10 young children to older adults suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease. years and must be a Fellow or Member Katherine Rawson Department of Psychology of the Society. Nominations are made Kent State University Learning and Memory by members of the Society, and each Nominators: Henry L. Roediger III, Maria candidate must be endorsed by two Zaragoza Dr. Rawson’s prolific research program has both members. Up to four awards can be practical significance and theoretical impact made each year. In 2014, one of these on several interrelated problems pertaining to education, strategies that promote effective four awards was named in honor of the learning, and the automatization of reading. Her work demonstrates the critical importance of the spacing, timing, and difficulty of retesting on late Steve Yantis. Selection of the winners the quality and durability of learning in educationally relevant domains. is made by a committee consisting of The Steven Yantis Early Career Award two members of the Governing Board Jessica K. Witt and three other members of the Society. Department of Psychology Colorado State University The 2014 committee consisted of Perception and Action Nominators: Anne Cleary, Arthur Glenberg, Patricia Reuter-Lorenz and Lynne Reder James Nairne (Governing Board) and Laura Novick, Dr. Witt’s innovative and influential research program investigates how Lael Schooler, and Sian Beilock. action shapes perception. Her research shows that perception is action-specific by demonstrating that people’s ability to perform particular actions influences how they perceive the size, speed, and distance of objects. vi 2014 Member Select-Speaker Award Magdalena Abel Regensburg University The Psychonomic Society Area: Human Learning and Instruction Announces the Winners of the Abstract #69: Sleep Benefits Memories After Restudy, but not After Retrieval Practice: Evidence for the Distribution-Based Bifurcation Model of the Testing Effect 2 0 1 4 Brian A. Anderson Johns Hopkins University Area: Recall Abstract #43: Value-Driven Attentional Capture is Modulated by Spatial Context Stephanie Borrie MEMBER Arizona State University Area: Speech Perception SELECT-SPEAKER Abstract #48: Computational Modelling of Conversational Entrainment: A Novel Framework for Examining Spoken Interaction in Communication Disorders AWARD Zhicheng Lin University of Washington Area: Consciousness Abstract #44: When Weaker is Stronger: Robust Attentional Orienting and The Member Select-Speaker Awards Alerting Evoked by Subliminal, but Not Supraliminal, Cues are designed to showcase exceptional Lynn K. Perry research by 10 Members. Each award University of Wisconsin-Madison winner will be given the unique Area: Meaning/Semantics Abstract #57: How Language Dynamically Structures our Concepts: opportunity to present his or her Evidence From Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation research in a spoken session during the conference and will be provided Elizabeth R. Schotter University of California, San Diego travel funds. Area: Letter/Word Procession Abstract #216: Toward a New Theory of Reading: Independent and Joint The Program Committee was Effects of Context, Parafoveal Preview, and Foveal Information responsible for the extremely difficult Thomas Töllner task of selecting the top 10 abstracts Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München submitted for a Member Select- Area: Neural Mechanisms of Cognition Speaker Award. The main criteria Abstract #250: Distractor Templates: Predicting Stimulus Surround Biases for selection were overall quality of Focal-Attentional Selection of High, but not Intermediate and Low, Salient Targets research, theoretical impact, and methodological rigor. This year’s Joseph Toscano award winners more than satisfied University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Area: Speech Perception these criteria and collectively Abstract #167: Speech Sound Encoding in the Brain Measured Using Fast represent an exciting and diverse Diffuse Optical Imaging range of research topics, including Jennifer Trueblood memory, learning, judgment and University of California, Irvine reasoning, and language processing. Area: Reasoning/Problem Solving Abstract #92: A Quantum Probability Approach to Human Causal The Member Select-Speaker Award Reasoning is now an annual award program. All Evie Vergauwe Members are encouraged to apply for University of Missouri-Columbia the award next year! Area: Working Memory Abstract #149: Tracing Thoughts Through the Probe-Span Task: Microana- lytic Evidence That People Mentally Refresh Items in Working Memory vii 2014 Clifford T. Morgan Best Article Awards PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY 2014 CLIFFORD T. MORGAN BEST ARTICLE AWARDS Sponsored by Springer The Psychonomic Society Clifford T. Morgan Best Article Award recognizes the best article published in each of the Psychonomic Society’s journals in 2014. Selections are made by the Editor of each journal. Award recipients (the lead author) will receive a certificate and honorarium of $1,000 and will be recognized at the 55th Annual Meeting in Long Beach, California. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics (Editor Jeremy M. Wolfe) Alan L. F. Lee, Hongjing Lu “Global-motion aftereffect does not depend on awareness of the adapting motion direction” DOI 10.3758/s13414-013-0609-8 Lee Behavior Research Methods (Editors Gregory Francis and Michael Jones) Clintin P. Davis-Stober, Jason Dana “Comparing the accuracy of experimental estimates to guessing: A new perspective on replication and the ‘crisis of confidence’ in psychology” DOI 10.3758/s13428-013-0342-1 Davis-Stober Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (Editor Deanna Barch) Benjamin Otto, Supriya Misra, Aditya Prasad, Kateri McRae “Functional overlap of top-down emotion regulation and generation: An fMRI study identifying common neural substrates between cognitive reappraisal and cognitively generated emotions” DOI 10.3758/s13415-013-0240-0 Otto Learning & Behavior (Editor Geoffrey Hall) Patrick C. Connor, Vincent M. Lolordo, Thomas P. Trappenberg “An elemental model of retrospective revaluation without within-compound associations” DOI 10.3758/s13420-013-0112-z Connor Memory & Cognition (Editors James Nairne and Neil Mulligan) Douglas Markant, Sarah DuBrow, Lila Davachi, Todd M. Gureckis “Deconstructing the effect of self-directed study on episodic memory” DOI 10.3758/s13421-014-0435-9 Markant Psychonomic Bulletin & Review (Editors Cathleen Moore and Gregory Hickok) Sudeep Bhatia “Sequential sampling and paradoxes of risky choice” DOI 10.3758/s13423-014-0650-1 Bhatia Visit http://www.psychonomic.org/clifford-t-morgan-best-article-awards for more information and previous recipients. viii The MIT Press Announcement The MIT Press ZENBRAIN HORIZONS LATETALKING CHILDREN THE COGNITIVE COMPUTER GAMES Toward a Living Zen A Symptom or a Stage? NEUROSCIENCES V FOR LEARNING James H. Austin, M.D. Stephen M. Camarata edited by Michael S. Gazzaniga An Evidence-Based Approach “. . . a wise and extraordinary “. . . will be a revelation and a and George R. Mangun Richard E. 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for 2015-2020 will be announced at the Business Meeting on. Saturday . ZEN BRAIN HORIZONS. Toward a —Thomas Sowell, Hoover. Institution
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