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Year | Number of Results |
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2014 | 1 |
2019 | 1 |
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What do laypeople believe about the voluntary and involuntary retrieval of memories?
Conscious Cogn. 2023 Apr;110:103491. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2023.103491. Epub 2023 Mar 10.
Conscious Cogn. 2023.
PMID: 36906978
Disfluent difficulties are not desirable difficulties: the (lack of) effect of Sans Forgetica on memory.
Taylor A, Sanson M, Burnell R, Wade KA, Garry M.
Taylor A, et al. Among authors: sanson m.
Memory. 2020 Aug;28(7):850-857. doi: 10.1080/09658211.2020.1758726. Epub 2020 May 4.
Memory. 2020.
PMID: 32364830
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Evidence That "Voluntary" Versus "Involuntary" Retrieval Is a Fluency-Based Attribution.
Sanson M, Cardwell BA, Rasmussen AS, Garry M.
Sanson M, et al.
Psychol Rep. 2020 Feb;123(1):141-158. doi: 10.1177/0033294119854180. Epub 2019 Jun 3.
Psychol Rep. 2020.
PMID: 31159670
No abstract available.
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People with easier to pronounce names promote truthiness of claims.
Newman EJ, Sanson M, Miller EK, Quigley-McBride A, Foster JL, Bernstein DM, Garry M.
Newman EJ, et al. Among authors: sanson m.
PLoS One. 2014 Feb 26;9(2):e88671. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0088671. eCollection 2014.
PLoS One. 2014.
PMID: 24586368
Free PMC article.
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