Psychological Science, new issue
A new issue of Psychological Science is now out, including papers on autistic intelligence, testosterone and conscious detection, self-reference in episodic memory, and the relationship between planning and perception. Psychological Science Volume 18, Issue 8, August 2007 RESEARCH REPORTS The Level and Nature of Autistic Intelligence Michelle Dawson, Isabelle Soulières, Morton Ann Gernsbacher, and Laurent […]
A new issue of Psychological Science is now out, including papers on autistic intelligence, testosterone and conscious detection, self-reference in episodic memory, and the relationship between planning and perception.
Psychological Science
Volume 18, Issue 8, August 2007
RESEARCH REPORTS
The Level and Nature of Autistic Intelligence
Michelle Dawson, Isabelle Soulières, Morton Ann Gernsbacher, and Laurent Mottron
pages 657–662
Testosterone Reduces Conscious Detection of Signals Serving Social Correction: Implications for Antisocial Behavior
Jack van Honk and Dennis J.L.G. Schutter
pages 663–667
How Is the Boss’s Mood Today? I Want a Raise
Eduardo B. Andrade and Teck-Hua Ho
pages 668–671
Self-Reference During Explicit Memory Retrieval: An Event-Related Potential Analysis
Elena Magno and Kevin Allan
pages 672–677
Biased Forecasting of Postdecisional Affect
Nick Sevdalis and Nigel Harvey
pages 678–681
The Generation Effect in Monkeys
Nate Kornell and Herbert S. Terrace
pages 682–685
SHORT REPORTS
How Can Dual-Task Working Memory Retention Limits Be Investigated?
Nelson Cowan and Candice C. Morey
pages 686–688
Moral Hypocrisy: Social Groups and the Flexibility of Virtue
Piercarlo Valdesolo and David DeSteno
pages 689–690
RESEARCH ARTICLES
Interpersonal Disgust, Ideological Orientations, and Dehumanization as Predictors of Intergroup Attitudes
Gordon Hodson and Kimberly Costello
pages 691–698
Anxiety Moderates the Interplay Between Cognitive and Affective Processing
Jeremy D. Dvorak-Bertsch, John J. Curtin, Tal J. Rubinstein, and Joseph P. Newman
pages 699–705
The Cross-Category Effect: Mere Social Categorization Is Sufficient to Elicit an Own-Group Bias in Face Recognition
Michael J. Bernstein, Steven G. Young, and Kurt Hugenberg
pages 706–712
Planning to Reach for an Object Changes How the Reacher Perceives It
Peter M. Vishton, Nicolette J. Stephens, Lauren A. Nelson, Sarah E. Morra, Kaitlin L. Brunick, and Jennifer A. Stevens
pages 713–719
Who Benefits From Memory Training?
David Bissig and Cindy Lustig
pages 720–726
Silence Is Not Golden: A Case for Socially Shared Retrieval-Induced Forgetting
Alexandru Cuc, Jonathan Koppel, and William Hirst
pages 727–733
Thinking of Things Unseen: Infants’ Use of Language to Update Mental Representations
Patricia A. Ganea, Kristin Shutts, Elizabeth S. Spelke, and Judy S. DeLoache
pages 734–739
Ratio Abstraction by 6-Month-Old Infants
Koleen McCrink and Karen Wynn
pages 740–745
Recognizing Intentions in Infant-Directed Speech: Evidence for Universals
Gregory A. Bryant and H. Clark Barrett
pages 746–751