Spatial interference triggered by gaze and arrows. The role of target background on spatial interference
Recent evidence with a spatial interference paradigm has shown that arrows and eye gaze yield opposite congruency effects, arrow target eliciting faster responses when their direction is congruent with their position (standard congruency effect), and gaze producing faster reaction times for incongruent conditions (reversed congruency effect). But in ecological contexts eye gaze tend to be more perceptually complex (i.e., embedded in the whole face) than simple arrows. The present study [...]
Normative data for 102 Spanish remote associate problems and age-related differences in performance
The Remote Associates Test (RAT) is a measure developed by Mednick [...]
Interpreting Foreign Smiles: Language Context and Type of Scale in the Assessment of Perceived Happiness and Sadness
The current study focuses on how different scales with varying demands [...]
Testing pragmatic inferences: The impact of language and culture
Pragmatic inferences are one way to study false memories in [...]
Vertical Mapping of Auditory Loudness: Loud is High, but Quiet is not Always Low
Although the perceptual association between verticality and pitch has been [...]
