Search Results - "Turk, David"

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    The Self-Reference Effect on Memory in Early Childhood by Cunningham, Sheila J., Brebner, Joanne L., Quinn, Francis, Turk, David J.

    Published in Child development (01-03-2014)
    “…The self-reference effect in memory is the advantage for information encoded about self, relative to other people. The early development of this effect was…”
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    Self-reflection and the temporal focus of the wandering mind by Smallwood, Jonathan, Schooler, Jonathan W., Turk, David J., Cunningham, Sheila J., Burns, Phebe, Macrae, C. Neil

    Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-12-2011)
    “…Current accounts suggest that self-referential thought serves a pivotal function in the human ability to simulate the future during mind-wandering. Using…”
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    The I in autism: Severity and social functioning in autism are related to self‐processing by Gillespie‐Smith, Karri, Ballantyne, Carrie, Branigan, Holly P., Turk, David J., Cunningham, Sheila J.

    “…It is well established that children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show impaired understanding of others and deficits within social functioning. However,…”
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    Mine and me: exploring the neural basis of object ownership by Turk, David J, van Bussel, Kim, Waiter, Gordon D, Macrae, C Neil

    Published in Journal of cognitive neuroscience (01-11-2011)
    “…Previous research has shown that encoding information in the context of self-evaluation leads to memory enhancement, supported by activation in ventromedial…”
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    The relationship between endowment and ownership effects in memory across cultures by Collard, Philip, Walford, Alexandra, Vernon, Lucy, Itagaki, Fumihiko, Turk, David

    Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-02-2020)
    “…•A novel protocol for measuring an endowment bias (EB) is developed.•UK participants showed EB scores consistent with the typical endowment effect.•Their EB…”
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    The Angular Gyrus Computes Action Awareness Representations by Farrer, Chlöé, Frey, Scott H., Van Horn, John D., Tunik, Eugene, Turk, David, Inati, Souheil, Grafton, Scott T.

    Published in Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. 1991) (01-02-2008)
    “…Involvement of the right inferior parietal area in action awareness was investigated while taking into account differences in the conscious experiences of…”
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    When "It" Becomes "Mine": Attentional Biases Triggered by Object Ownership by Turk, David J, van Bussel, Kim, Brebner, Joanne L, Toma, Andreea S, Krigolson, Olav, Handy, Todd C

    Published in Journal of cognitive neuroscience (01-12-2011)
    “…Previous research has demonstrated that higher-order cognitive processes associated with the allocation of selective attention are engaged when highly familiar…”
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    Yours or mine? Ownership and memory by Cunningham, Sheila J., Turk, David J., Macdonald, Lynda M., Neil Macrae, C.

    Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-03-2008)
    “…An important function of the self is to identify external objects that are potentially personally relevant. We suggest that such objects may be identified…”
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    Attention and awareness: Representation of visuomotor space in split-brain patients by Dosso, Jill A., Chua, Romeo, Weeks, Daniel J., Turk, David J., Kingstone, Alan

    Published in Cortex (01-01-2020)
    “…Each cerebral hemisphere primarily controls and receives sensory input with regard to the contralateral hand. In the disconnected brain (split-brain), when the…”
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    Exploring early self-referential memory effects through ownership by Cunningham, Sheila J., Vergunst, Francis, Macrae, C. Neil, Turk, David J.

    “…The self‐reference effect (SRE) is the reliable memory advantage for information encoded about self over material encoded about other people. The developmental…”
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    Self-memory biases in explicit and incidental encoding of trait adjectives by Turk, David J., Cunningham, Sheila J., Macrae, C. Neil

    Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-09-2008)
    “…An extensive literature has demonstrated that encoding information in a self-referential manner enhances subsequent memory performance. This ‘self-reference…”
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    The importance of skin color and facial structure in perceiving and remembering others: An electrophysiological study by Brebner, Joanne L, Krigolson, Olav, Handy, Todd C, Quadflieg, Susanne, Turk, David J

    Published in Brain research (04-05-2011)
    “…Abstract The own-race bias (ORB) is a well-documented recognition advantage for own-race (OR) over cross-race (CR) faces, the origin of which remains unclear…”
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    An unforgettable apple: Memory and attention for forbidden objects by Truong, Grace, Turk, David J., Handy, Todd C.

    “…Are we humans drawn to the forbidden? From jumbo-sized soft drinks to illicit substances, the influence of prohibited ownership on subsequent demand has made…”
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    Divided attention selectively impairs memory for self-relevant information by Turk, David J., Brady-van den Bos, Mirjam, Collard, Philip, Gillespie-Smith, Karri, Conway, Martin A., Cunningham, Sheila J.

    Published in Memory & cognition (01-05-2013)
    “…Information that is relevant to oneself tends to be remembered more than information that relates to other people, but the role of attention in eliciting this…”
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    Mine to remember: The impact of ownership on recollective experience by van den Bos, Mirjam, Cunningham, Sheila J., Conway, Martin A., Turk, David J.

    “…Evaluating information with reference to self is associated with enhanced memory, the "self-reference effect". The effect is found in recognition accompanied…”
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    Exploring the effects of ownership and choice on self-memory biases by Cunningham, Sheila J., Brady-Van den Bos, Mirjam, Turk, David J.

    Published in Memory (Hove) (01-07-2011)
    “…Objects encoded in the context of temporary ownership by self enjoy a memorial advantage over objects owned by other people. This memory effect has been linked…”
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    We are more selfish than we think: The endowment effect and reward processing within the human medial-frontal cortex by Hassall, Cameron D., Silver, Amy, Turk, David J., Krigolson, Olave E.

    “…Perceived ownership has been shown to impact a variety of cognitive processes: attention, memory, and-more recently-reward processing. In the present…”
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    Survival of the selfish: Contrasting self-referential and survival-based encoding by Cunningham, Sheila J., Brady-Van den Bos, Mirjam, Gill, Lucy, Turk, David J.

    Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-03-2013)
    “…► Research on survival-related memory effects is confounded with self-referencing. ► We show that survival encoding scenarios only elicit a memory advantage…”
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    Eye rivalry and object rivalry in the intact and split-brain by Ritchie, Kay L., Bannerman, Rachel L., Turk, David J., Sahraie, Arash

    Published in Vision research (Oxford) (18-10-2013)
    “…•A novel paradigm found differences between rivalry in a split-brain and controls.•Stimuli presented in the Diaz-Caneja style elicit more eye than object…”
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