Journal Article (7917)
1996
Journal Article
103 (3), pp. 592 - 596 (1996)
On narrow norms and vague heuristics: A reply to Kahneman and Tversky (1996). Psychological Review
Journal Article
31 (3-4), p. 1310 - 1310 (1996)
Reasoning and rationality. International Journal of Psychology
Journal Article
16 (3), pp. 273 - 280 (1996)
The psychology of good judgment: Frequency formats and simple algorithms. Medical Decision Making
Journal Article
19 (1), p. 23 (1996)
Why do frequency formats improve Bayesian reasoning? Cognitive algorithms work on information, which needs representation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Journal Article
103 (4), pp. 650 - 669 (1996)
Reasoning the fast and frugal way: Models of bounded rationality. Psychological Review
Journal Article
119 (1), pp. 23 - 26 (1996)
How do we tell an association from a rule? Comment on Sloman (1996). Psychological Bulletin
Journal Article
7 (1), pp. 65 - 82 (1996)
How leisure activities correspond to the development of creative achievement: insights from a study of highly intelligent individuals. High Ability Studies
Journal Article
31 (3-4), p. 1176 - 1176 (1996)
The ''conjunction fallacy'' revisited: Polysemy, conversational maxims, and frequency judgments. International Journal of Psychology
Journal Article
7, pp. 1977 - 1981 (1996)
Non-invasive functional mapping of the human motor cortex using near-infrared spectroscopy. NeuroReport
Journal Article
777, pp. 22 - 29 (1996)
Near infrared spectroscopy in the diagnosis of Alzheimer`s disease. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Journal Article
31 (3-4), p. 3476 - 3476 (1996)
Bayesian reasoning in ecological contexts: The impact of information representation for physicians. International Journal of Psychology
Journal Article
31 (3-4), p. 4406 - 4406 (1996)
Hindsight bias as a result of cue updating. International Journal of Psychology
Journal Article
58 (1), pp. 102 - 110 (1996)
No prevalence of right-left over top-bottom spatial codes. Perception and Psychophysics
Journal Article
3, pp. 546 - 571 (1996)
S-R compatibility effects without response uncertainty. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A
Journal Article
59 (3), pp. 176 - 186 (1996)
The cognitive representation of action: Automatic integration of perceived action effects. Psychological Research
Journal Article
36 (3), pp. 393 - 400 (1996)
Apparent diffusion coefficients in benign and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis by nuclear magnetic resonance. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Journal Article
20 (6), pp. 467 - 481 (1996)
Fast Magnetic Resonance Imaging Methods for Study of Human Brain Function and their Application at High Magnetic Field. Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics
Journal Article
16, pp. 817 - 826 (1996)
Simultaneous recording of cerebral blood oxygenation changes during human brain activation by magnetic resonance imaging and near-infrared spectroscopy. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
Journal Article
99, p. 183 – 190 (1996)
Linear Estimation discriminates midline source and motor cortex contribution to readiness potential. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology
Journal Article
4, pp. 950 - 971 (1996)
A referential-coding explanation for compatibility effects of physically orthogonal stimulus and response dimensions. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A
Journal Article
5 (2), pp. 179 - 184 (1996)
The pragmatic nature of induction. Psykhe: Revista de la Escuela de Psicologia
Journal Article
8 (1), pp. 31 - 54 (1996)
A new theory of cerebellar function. Connection Science
Journal Article
8 (5), pp. 453 - 473 (1996)
Dissociations in the processing of ''what'' and ''where'' information in working memory: An event-related potential analysis. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal Article
4 (3), pp. 211 - 224 (1996)
Event-related potentials reveal topographical and temporal distinct neuronal activation patterns for spatial and object working memory. Cognitive Brain Research
Journal Article
86 (3-4), pp. 217 - 224 (1996)
Morphological asymmetries of motoneurons innervating upper extremities: Clues to the anatomical foundations of handedness? International Journal of Neuroscience