John Seamon
Recent Publications
Seamon, J. G. (Book in preparation). Memories & Movies:
A Film Lover's Guide to Understanding Memory.
Seamon, J.G., Bohn, J.M., Coddington, I.E., Ebling, M.C.,
Grund, E.M., Haring, C.T., Jang, S-J., Kim, D., Liong, C., Paley, F.M., Pang,
L.K., & Siddique. A.H. (In press). Can survival processing enhance story
memory?: Testing the generalizability of the adaptive memory framework.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
Seamon, J.G., Punjabi, P.V., & Busch, E. A. (2010).
Memorizing Milton's Paradise Lost: A study of a septuagenarian exceptional
memorizer. Memory, 18, 498-503.
Seamon, J. G., Blumenson, C. N., Karp, S. R., Perl, J. J.,
Laura A. Rindlaub, L. A., & Speisman, B. B. (2009). Did we see someone shake
hands with a fire hydrant?: Social reminiscence affects false recollections from
a campus walk. American Journal of Psychology, 122, 235-247.
Sun, X., Punjabi, P. V., Greenberg, L. T., & Seamon, J. G.
(2009). Does feigning amnesia impair subsequent recall? Memory & Cognition,
37, 81-89.
Gordon, R., Seamon, J. G., & Pearlson, G. (2009). An fMRI
study of neurocognitive functioning in schizophrenia with a mere exposure effect
paradigm. Schizophrenia Research, 108, 290-292.
Cotel, S.C., Gallo, D.A., & Seamon, J.G. (2008).
Nonconscious activation can generate false memories. Consciousness and
Cognition, 17, 210-218
Seamon, J.G., Philbin, M.M., & Harrison, L.G. (2006). Do
you remember proposing marriage to the Pepsi machine? False recollections from a
campus walk. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 13, 752-756.
Seamon, J.G., Berko, J.R, Sahlin, B., Yu, Y.L., Colker, J.
M., & Gottfried, D.H. (2006). Can false memories spontaneously recover?
Memory, 14, 415-423.
Sahlin, B.H., Harding, M.G., & Seamon, J.G. (2005). A
cross-language false memory effect in proficient English-Spanish bilinguals.
Memory & Cognition, 33, 1414-1421.
Gallo, D. A., & Seamon, J.G. (2004). Are nonconscious processes sufficient to
produce false memories? Consciousness and Cognition, 13, 158-168.
Seamon, J.G., Goodkind, M. S., Dumey, A.
D., Dick, E., Aufseeser, M. S., Strickland, S. E., Woulfin, J. R., & Fung, N.S.
(2003). "If I didn't write it, why would I remember it?": Effects of encoding,
attention, and practice on accurate and false memory. Memory & Cognition,
31, 445-457.
Seamon, J.G., Luo, C.R., Kopecky, J.J., Price, C.A., Rothschild, L., Fung,
N.S., & Schwartz, M.A. (2002). Are false memories more difficult to
forget than accurate memories?: The effect of retention interval on recall and
recognition. Memory & Cognition, 30, 1054-1064.
Seamon, J.G., Lee, I.A., Toner, S.K., Wheeler, R.H., Goodkind, M.S., &
Birch, A.D. (2002). Thinking of critical words during study is unnecessary
for false memory in the DRM procedure. Psychological Science, 13,
526-531.
Seamon, J.G., Luo, C.R., Shulman, E.P. Toner, S.K., & Caglar, S. (2002). False memories are hard to inhibit: Differential effects of
directed forgetting on accurate and false recall in the DRM procedure.
Memory, 10, 225-237.
Seamon, J.G., Schlegel, S.E., Hiester, P. M., Landau, S. M., & Blumenthal,
B. F. (2002). Misremembering pictured objects: People of all ages demonstrate
the boundary extension illusion. American Journal of Psychology, 115,
151-167.
Seamon, J.G., Luo, C.R., Schwartz, M.A., Jones, K.J., Lee, D.M., & Jones,
S.J. (2002). Repetition can affect accurate and false recognition similarly or
differently. Journal of Memory and Language, 46, 323-340.
Seamon, J.G., Luo, C.R., Schlegel, S.E., Greene, S.E., & Goldenberg,
A.B. (2000). False memory for categorized pictures and words: The category
associates procedure for studying memory errors in children and adults.
Journal
of Memory and Language, 42, 120-146.
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