Effect of Divided Attention on the Production of False Memories en the DRM Paradigm: A Study of Dichotic Listening and Shadowing
The Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm comprises the study of lists in which words (e.g., bed, pillow, etc.) are all associates of a single nonstudied critical item (e.g., sleep). The probability of falsely recalling or recognising nonstudied critical items is often similar to (or sometimes higher than) the probability of correctly recalling or recognising studied associates. False memories produced throughout this paradigm are usually seen as vivid, long lasting, and difficult to [...]
Locating basic Spanish colour categories in CIE L*u*v* Space: Identification, Lightness segregation and correspondence with English equivalents
Five experiments were performed to identify the basic Spanish colour categories [...]
A new set of items for the evaluation of living/nonliving dissociations with norms collected from healthy elderly Spanish
En este estudio se presentan índices de las propiedades de 112 [...]
Comparison among effect-size indices for dichotomized outcomes in meta-analysis
El objetivo principal del presente trabajo es comparar, con datos [...]
Effects of emotional induction in causal learning
Uno de los aspectos del aprendizaje causal menos estudiado es [...]
