1 – 15 of 15
- show: 250
- |
- sort: year (new to old)
Close
Embed this list
<iframe src=" "
width=" "
height=" "
allowtransparency="true"
frameborder="0">
</iframe>
- 2007
-
Mark
Using spatial frequency adaptation to study word recognition
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2006
-
Mark
Assessing effects of fixation demands on perception of lateralized words: A visual window technique for studying hemispheric asymmetry
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2005
-
Mark
Assessing the role of different spatial frequencies in word perception by good and poor readers
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Spatial Frequency Sensitivity Differences between Adults of Good and Poor Reading Ability
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2004
-
Mark
What do lateralized displays tell us about visual word perception? A cautionary indication from the word-letter effect
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2003
-
Mark
Assessing effects of stimulus orientation on perception of lateralized words and nonwords
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Perceptual Interactions Between Bilaterally Presented Words: What You Get Is Often Not What You See
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Effects of form familiarity on perception of words, pseudowords and nonwords in the two cerebral hemispheres
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Asymmetries and eccentricities in studies of lateralized word recognition: A response to Nazir
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Assessing the role of hemispheric specialization, modes of orthographic processing and retinal eccentricity in lateralized word recognition
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Assessing the Importance of Letter Pairs in Reading—Parafoveal Processing Is Not the Only View: Reply to Inhoff, Radach, Eiter, and Skelly (2003)
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Assessing the Importance of Letter Pairs in Initial, Exterior, and Interior Positions in Reading
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2000
-
Mark
Lateralized Word Recognition: Assessing the Role of Hemispheric Specialization, Modes of Lexical Access, and Perceptual Asymmetry
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 1998
-
Mark
Increasing the benefits of eye-tracking devices in divided visual field studies of cerebral asymmetry
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Central fixations are inadequately controlled by instructions alone: Implications for studying cerebral asymmetry
(
- Contribution to journal › Article