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59

TH

ANNUAL MEETING

Hyatt Regency New Orleans New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Thursday, November 15-Sunday, November 18, 2018

REGISTRATION

Elite Foyer, First Floor

Wednesday, November 14 .. 4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. Thursday, November 15 ... 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Friday, November 16 ... 7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday, November 17 ... 7:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Sunday, November 18 ... 7:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

OPENING SESSION/KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Celestin D/E, Third Floor

Thursday, November 15 ... 8:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. • Psychonomic Society 2018 Early Career and

Mid-Career Awards

• Psychonomic Society/Women in Cognitive Science Travel and Networking Award for Junior Scientists

• Building a More Replicable Experimental Psychology: Key Challenges Hal Pashler, University of California, San Diego

OPENING RECEPTION

Elite A/B, First Floor

Thursday, November 15 .. Immediately Following Keynote Address

SYMPOSIA

Celestin E, Third Floor

Friday, November 16, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Symposium I: Generalization in Language and Memory

Celestin E, Third Floor

Friday, November 16, 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m.

Symposium II: Should Statistics Determine the Practice of Science, or Science Determine the Practice of Statistics?

Celestin D, Third Floor

Friday, November 16, 3:50 p.m.-5:50 p.m. Symposium III: Leading Edge Workshop–Time for Action: Reaching for a Better Understanding of the Dynamics of Cognition

SYMPOSIA - CONTINUED

Celestin E, Third Floor

Saturday, November 17, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Symposium IV: Medical Image Perception and Decision Making

Celestin E, Third Floor

Saturday, November 17, 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Symposium V: What Speech Prosody Can Tell Us About Cognition

POSTER SESSIONS

Elite A/B, First Floor

Session I Thursday, November 15 ... 6:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m. Session II Friday, November 16 ... 12:00 p.m.-1:30 p.m. Session III Friday, November 16 ... 6:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m. Session IV Saturday, November 17 ... 12:00 p.m.-1:30 p.m. Session V Saturday, November 17 ... 6:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m.

BUSINESS MEETING

Bolden 6, Second Floor

Saturday, November 17 ... 5:10 p.m.-6:00 p.m. • Presentation of the Psychonomic Society

2018 Clifford T. Morgan Best Article Awards, Graduate Travel Awards, and J. Frank Yates Student Travel Awards

• Business of the Psychonomic Society

FUTURE MEETINGS

2019 – Montréal, QC – November 14-17 2020 – Austin, TX – November 19-22 2021 – San Diego, CA – November 18-21 2022 – Washington, DC – November 17-20 2023 – San Francisco, CA – November 16-19 2024 – New York City, NY – November 21-24

Abstracts

of the Psychonomic Society

Volume 23 • November 2018

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OPENING SESSION/KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Building a More Replicable Experimental Psychology: Key Challenges

Hal Pashler, University of California, San Diego

Thursday, November 15, 2018, 8:00 p.m.

Celestin D/E, 3rd Floor

TABLE OF CONTENTS

General Information . . . . ii

Hotel Maps . . . . vii

2018 Mid-Career Awards . . . . xi

2018 Early Career Awards . . . . xii

2018 Graduate Travel Awards . . . .xiii

2018 J . Frank Yates Student Travel Awards . . . . xiv

2018 Clifford T . Morgan Best Article Awards . . . . xv

Special Events . . . . xvi

In Memoriam . . . . xvii

Condensed Schedule A, sessions by time . . . . xxix

Condensed Schedule B, sessions by room . . . . xxxii

Condensed Schedule C, abstracts by time . . . . xxxiv

Spoken Sessions, Friday morning . . . . 1

Spoken Sessions, Friday afternoon . . . . 15

Spoken Sessions, Saturday morning . . . . 29

Spoken Sessions, Saturday afternoon . . . . 44

Spoken Sessions, Sunday morning . . . . 58

Poster Session I, Thursday evening . . . . 75

Poster Session II, Friday noon . . . . 127

Poster Session III, Friday evening . . . . 181

Poster Session IV, Saturday noon . . . . 235

Poster Session V, Saturday evening . . . . 289

Author Index . . . . 343

Keyword Index . . . . 365

OPENING RECEPTION

Thursday, November 15, immediately following Keynote Address

Elite Hall, 1st Floor

General Information

NOTICES

Designation of Psychonomic Society Award Winners: One asterisk (*) by an author’s name indicates a recipient of the

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VENUE/HOTEL/MEETING ROOMS

All sessions (spoken and poster) for the 2018

Psychonomic Society Annual Meeting will be held at the

Hyatt Regency New Orleans, 601 Loyola Avenue, New

Orleans, LA 70113, USA.

To maintain the Society’s practice of no registration fee

for members, it is essential that all hotel rooms reserved

for the Annual Meeting be identified as such at the

time of booking. To ensure you receive the specially

negotiated room rate, please contact:

Hyatt Regency New Orleans

$209 USD + tax/fees (single/double) per night

Hotel Link: https://book.passkey.com/

event/49000983/owner/2787/home

Phone: +1-888-421-1442

Please make your reservations no later than October

16, 2018. There is a limited number of rooms available

at the hotel, so book early to secure your sleeping

room reservations (rooms may be sold out well before

this date). Visit the Psychonomic Society website

(www.psychonomic.org/2018hotels) to make online

reservations.

REGISTRATION

Registration is free to members of the Psychonomic

Society and all members must register. Registration for

non-members is $75. There is no registration fee for

undergraduate students. Membership in the Society is

inexpensive and strongly encouraged.

Registration will be located in at the Elite Registration

Desk main tower, 1st floor during the following times:

Wednesday, November 14 ...4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.

Thursday, November 15 ... 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.

Friday, November 16 ... 7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Saturday, November 17 ... 7:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

Sunday, November 18 ... 7:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

All attendees must register. To avoid lines onsite, you

are strongly encouraged to preregister through the

Psychonomic Society website (www.psychonomic.

org/2018registration).

ABSTRACT AND PROGRAM BOOK

Programs will be available in print at the registration

desk and as a PDF at www.psychonomic.

org/2018AnnualMeeting.

MOBILE APP

A free mobile app for this year’s meeting will be available

for download in the Apple App Store and Google Play

Store a few weeks prior to the Annual Meeting. All

versions include the full program and abstracts. It is

recommended that you download the mobile app before

you come to the Annual Meeting. Internet service may

not be available, or slow to download, in the meeting

space at the Hyatt Regency New Orleans.

SPEAKER READY ROOM

Session chairs are encouraged to solicit papers from

individuals in their sessions prior to the meeting and

load presentations prior to the session in the speaker

ready room, located in Bolden 1, on the 2nd floor.

Audiovisual support will be available in the speaker

ready room to help with loading presentations during

the following hours:

Friday, November 16 ... 7:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.

Saturday, November 17 ... 7:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

Sunday, November 18 ... 7:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

TRAVEL TO THE UNITED STATES

A foreign national or alien entering the U.S. is generally

required to present a passport and valid visa issued by

a U.S. Consular Official, unless they are a citizen of a

country eligible for the Visa Waiver Program, or are a

lawful permanent resident of the U.S. or a citizen of

Canada.

The Visa Waiver Program allows foreign nationals from

certain countries to be admitted to the U.S. under limited

conditions and for a limited time without obtaining a

visa. The foreign national must arrive on an approved

carrier (if coming by air or sea), staying no more than

90 days, for pleasure/medical purposes/business, and

be able to prove they are not inadmissible. The foreign

national is still required to have a passport.

To obtain a list of countries eligible and VWP passport

requirements for the Visa Waiver Program, please visit

https://www.dhs.gov/visa-waiver-program-requirements.

For complete information on requirements to enter the

United States, go to: https://www.usa.gov/enter-us

General Information

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Citizens of Canada

Citizens of Canada traveling to the United States do not

require a nonimmigrant visa if they are traveling directly

from Canada for the purposes of visiting, tourism,

and temporary business travel purposes. However, all

Canadians entering the United States by air are required

to have a valid passport. Canadians entering the United

States by land or sea must have a Western Hemisphere

Travel Initiative (WHTI)-compliant travel document.

Additional resources for Canadian visitors to the United

States can be found on the United States Embassy and

Consulates in Canada website.

Requesting a Letter of Invitation from the

Psychonomic Society

To request a Letter of Invitation from the Psychonomic

Society, please email us at info@psychonomic.org.

TRAVEL TO NEW ORLEANS

Transportation Centers (distance to hotel)

• Union Passenger Terminal (Amtrak) – 0.3 miles

• Port of New Orleans – 3 miles

• Louis Armstrong New Orleans International

Airport – 15 miles

Local Information

Information about New Orleans and the meeting can

be found online at https://www.psychonomic.org/

page/2018explore

Parking

For your convenience, the Hyatt Regency New Orleans

offers valet services.

Short-Term Hourly Valet Rates (subject to change)

0-1 Hour

- $10 USD

1-2 Hours

- $15 USD

2-4 Hours

- $22 USD

4-10 Hours - $30 USD

10+ Hours - $40 USD

Standard Overnight Parking - $40 + tax

Fuel Economy Vehicles Overnight - $30 +tax

In addition to the hotel’s valet, there are also several

nearby parking lots (fees apply), including the 1301

Girod Parking Garage that connects directly to the

hotel. Contact Merit Parking at +1-504-561-0575 for

confirmed pricing.

Taxis

Passengers traveling from the airport must wait in line at a

taxi stand for taxi service. Taxi rides cost approximately $36

USD from the airport to the Central Business District (CBD)

or French Quarter (west of Elysian Fields) for up to two (2)

passengers. For three (3) or more passengers, the fare will be

$15 USD per passenger.

Shared Ride Services

New Orleans has many options for Uber, Lyft, or shared

shuttle services. We recommend you download all

applicable apps ahead of time.

POSTER SESSIONS

All poster sessions will take place in the Elite Hall on

the first floor of the Hyatt Regency New Orleans. The

three evening sessions will be held in conjunction with

a general reception. Authors of posters are asked to

make their posters available for viewing on the following

schedule:

NOTE: Each poster must fit on one side of a 4 feet high

X 8 feet wide (with a 1-inch frame around the perimeter)

poster board. Posters may be electronically submitted to

the FedEx office at the Hyatt Regency New Orleans at an

additional cost. Visit www.psychonomic.org/page/posters

for details, and suggestions on preparing your poster.

The extended viewing time will allow all interested

persons to see posters of their choice and hopefully

reduce the crowded conditions we have sometimes had

at the poster sessions. All posters must be removed as

soon as the poster session is concluded. Posters that are

not removed will be discarded.

The numbering of posters this year uses the same system

as last year. Abstract numbers assigned to posters are not

in sequence with the numbers assigned to talks. Rather,

each poster is assigned a six-digit abstract number. The

first digit codes the session to which the poster has been

assigned; the last three digits code the location of the

poster within its session (i.e., 001-243).

General Information

Session

Set-up

Viewing

Author

Present

Teardown

Poster

I: Thursday

Evening

3:15 p.m.-

3:45 p.m.

4:00 p.m.-

7:30 p.m.

6:00 p.m.-

7:30 p.m.

7:30 p.m.-

8:00 p.m.

II: Friday

Noon

10:15 a.m.-

10:45 a.m.

11:00 a.m.-

1:30 p.m.

12:00 p.m.-

1:30 p.m.

1:30 p.m.-

2:00 p.m.

III: Friday

Evening

3:15 p.m.-

3:45 p.m.

4:00 p.m.-

7:30 p.m.

6:00 p.m.-

7:30 p.m.

7:30 p.m.-

8:00 p.m.

IV: Saturday

Noon

10:15 a.m.-

10:45 a.m.

11:00 a.m.-

1:30 p.m.

12:00 p.m.-

1:30 p.m.

1:30 p.m.-

2:00 p.m.

V: Saturday

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EXHIBITORS

Attendees are encouraged to visit our exhibitors located

in the Elite Hall at the Hyatt Regency New Orleans.

Exhibit hours are:

Thursday, November 15 . . .3:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m.

Friday, November 16 . . . . 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.,

4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.

Saturday, November 17 . . . 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.,

4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.

RECEPTIONS

Opening Reception

Thursday, November 15 (immediately following the

Keynote Address): approximately 9:15 p.m.-10:30 p.m.

Elite Hall A/B, 1st Floor

Diversity & Inclusion Reception

Friday, November 16: 4:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.

Strand 10 A/B, 2nd Floor

Friday Reception & Poster Session

Friday, November 16: 5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. (Cash bar

only)

Elite Hall, 1st Floor

Saturday Reception & Poster Session

Saturday, November 17: 5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.

(Cash bar only)

Elite Hall, 1st Floor

COFFEE BREAKS

Complimentary coffee and tea will be available from

9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

in the Celestin Foyer on Friday,

Saturday, and the Strand Foyer on Sunday.

NURSING MOTHER’S ROOM

The nursing mother’s room at the Hyatt Regency New

Orleans is located on the fourth floor; the key is available

at the main PS registration desk. The room is equipped

with comfortable furniture and a private area for nursing,

but no refrigerator. Attendees may not use this room for

babysitting purposes.

JOGONOMICS

Join your fellow Psychonomes on a 5-mile or 5K fun

run/walk. The group will meet in the lobby of the Hyatt

Regency at 6:00 a.m. on Saturday, November 17, and

the run will leave promptly at 6:15 a.m. Again, this

year we have ad

ded a low-key route that will run lower

mileage at a more relaxed rate. Organizers: Jeff Zacks

and Marianne Lloyd. There is no fee, but you will be

required to sign a waiver. Register and sign your waiver

in advance to save time in the morning

PSYCHONOMIC TIME

Persons chairing sessions this year will be asked to keep

the spoken papers schedule on times standardized against

a clock at the Psychonomic Society Registration Desk.

All attendees are asked to synchronize their watches to

Psychonomic time.

AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT FOR TALKS

LCD projectors (e.g., for PowerPoint presentations) and

laptop computers (PC) will be provided in all rooms

where spoken sessions are scheduled. Please bring your

presentation on a USB drive. Presenters and s

ession

chairs are strongly encouraged to visit the speaker ready

room in Bolden 1, 2nd floor, well in advance of their

talks to review and upload presentation

s. Alternatively,

you are encouraged to be in your session room 30

minutes prior to the beginning of that session to load

your presentation. We recommend bringing two copies

of your presentation in case of media failure.

Presentations must be created in 16:9 format to fit

formatting of projectors used. Visit www.psychonomic.

org/presentations for more information.

PHOTOGRAPHIC RELEASE

As part of your registration for the 2018 Annual

Meeting, the Psychonomic Society reserves the right to

use photographs and video taken during the meeting for

future marketing purposes. If you do not wish to have

your photograph or video used for such purposes, please

contact us at the Psychonomic Society Registration

Desk, located in Elite Registration Desk Main Tower,

1st Floor.

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17th Annual Auditory Perception, Cognition, and

Action Meeting (APCAM)

Thursday, November 15, 2018

8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.

Strand 11B, 2nd Floor

Website: www.apcam.us

Configural Processing Consortium (CPC)

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

Imperial 5A, 4th Floor

Website: www.configural.org

International Association for Metacognition (IAM)

Thursday, November 15, 2018

12:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.

Strand 12 A/B, 2nd Floor

Website: http://iametacognition.wix.com/

metacognition

Object Perception, Attention, and Memory (OPAM)

26th Anniversary Workshop

Thursday, November 15, 2018: 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

Celestin F/G, 3rd Floor

Website: www.opam.net

Society for Computers in Psychology (SCiP)

48th Annual Meeting

Thursday, November 15, 2018

7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Strand 7, Strand 8, and Strand 11A, 2nd Floor

Website: http://scip.ws

Society for Judgment and Decision-Making Annual

Meeting (SJDM)

Friday, November 16 - Monday, November 19, 2018

Empire Ballrooms, 2nd Floor

Website: www.sjdm.org

Society for Mathematical Psychology (SMP)

Computational Approaches to Memory and

Decision Making

Thursday, November 15, 2018

9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

Strand 10A, 2nd Floor

Website: www.mathpsych.org

SPARK Society

Thursday, November 15, 2018

2:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.

Strand 3, 2nd Floor

Tactile Research Group (TRG) Annual Meeting

Thursday, November 15, 2018

9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

Strand 4, 2nd Floor

Website: trg.objectis.net

Women in Cognitive Science (WiCS)

18th Annual Meeting

Thursday, November 15, 2018

4:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. (Reception at 6:00 p.m.)

Celestin H for meeting; Celestin Foyer for reception

& mentoring sessions

Website: www.womenincogsci.org/

General Information

AFFILIATE MEETINGS

PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY JOURNALS

The Psychonomic Society publishes seven highly respected, peer-reviewed journals covering all aspects of cognitive and

experimental psychology . Select a Psychonomic Society journal to showcase your science and to ensure that your research delivers

the maximum impact to the global scientific community . Members receive free online access to all seven Psychonomic Society

journals . https://www.psychonomic.org/page/journals

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2018 PROGRAM

There were 1,543 total submissions and 1,523 valid

submissions. Of the 1,523 papers that were placed

on the program, 300 are spoken papers and 1,223

are posters. In addition, there were four invited

symposia, and one symposium that resulted from

the Psychonomic Society Leading Edge Workshop

program.

PROGRAM HISTORY

Year – Site

Valid Submissions

2018 – New Orleans

1,523

2017 – Vancouver

1,438

2016 – Boston

1,514

2015 – Chicago

1,306

2014 – Long Beach

1,300

2013 – Toronto

1,264

2012 – Minneapolis

1,054

2011 – Seattle

1,037

2010 – St. Louis

928

2018 PROGRAM COMMITTEE

• Edward Awh, Chair, University of Chicago

• Marc Brysbaert, USA Ghent University

• Laura Carlson, University of Notre Dame

• Stephen Mitroff, George Washington University

• Kristi Multhaup, Davidson College

• Duane Watson, Vanderbilt University

• R. Reed Hunt, University of Mississippi, ex officio

PROGRAM AND CONFERENCE

ORGANIZATION

The Secretary, R. Reed Hunt, has the responsibility for

organizing the program and the Program Committee

reviews the schedule. They do so with the indispensable

help of Lou Shomette, Executive Director; Amy Bucaida,

Meeting Planner; Brian Weaver, Communications

& Marketing Manager; Nan Knuteson, Membership

Coordinator and Registrar; Kathy Kuehn, Production

Director; Cynthia Coates, Graphic Artist; Erica Koconis,

Accountant; and Bill Stoeffler, Account Director.

OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETY

Chair

John Dunlosky, Kent State University

Past Chair

Aaron Benjamin, University of Illinois

Chair-Elect Laura Carlson, University of Notre Dame

Secretary

R. Reed Hunt, University of Mississippi

Treasurer

Marianne Lloyd, Seton Hall University

Executive

Director

Louis Shomette, Psychonomic Society

2018 GOVERNING BOARD

• Edward Awh, University of Chicago

• Teresa Bajo, University of Granada

• Aaron Benjamin, University of Illinois at

Urbana-Champaign

• Marc Brysbaert, Ghent University

• Laura Carlson, University of Notre Dame

• John Dunlosky, Kent State University

• Fernanda Ferreira, University of California, Davis

• Penny M. Pexman, University of Calgary

• James Pomerantz, Rice University

• Patricia Reuter-Lorenz, University of Michigan

• Valerie Reyna, Cornell University

• Duane Watson, Vanderbilt University

• R. Reed Hunt, University of Mississippi, ex officio

• Marianne Lloyd, Seton Hall University, ex officio

• Louis Shomette, Executive Director, ex officio

PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY STATEMENT ON

HARASSMENT

The Psychonomic Society is an inclusive and welcoming

organization, and our meeting should reflect those

values. Conference attendees and visitors should enjoy

freedom of speech, freedom of thought, and freedom

from harassment of all kinds. Recent events in the

media remind us that academic settings are ones where

we must be especially vigilant. As a scientific society,

we do not want to police behavior, nor do we wish to

dampen the professional and personal interactions that

are so important to our meeting. But we do encourage

members to take into account others’ perspectives and

consider how a question, comment, or invitation might

be received when there is a power differential between

parties. No attendee should feel vulnerable to harassment

at our meetings, or feel that they are enduring a climate

of fear or hostility. Let’s all work together to ensure that

our values of inclusion, respect, and professionalism

are ones that are enjoyed by all of our members and

attendees.

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Hotel Map

LOBBY ELEVATORS LOBBY ESCALATORS STAIRS UP TO EMPIRE BALLROOM FRONT DESK MAIN ENTRANCE LOBBY

ARRIVAL / DEPARTURE TUNNEL

BORGNE ELITE A ELITE B ELITE FOYER RESTROOM ATRIUM ELEVATORS RESTROOM LOADING

DOCK #2 LOADING DOCK #1

RESTROOM RESTROOMS STAIRS TO SECOND FLOOR ELITE HALL ELITE ESCALATORS GIROD STR EE T LOYOLA AVENUE T : +1 504 561 1234 F : +1 504 523 0488 hrno.sales@hyatt.com neworleans.hyatt.com

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS

601 Loyola Avenue,

New Orleans, Louisiana 70113 USA

FLOOR PLAN

Level One

06.15

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS HOTEL: FLOOR PLAN LEVEL ONE

PS Registration

Exhibits & Posters

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viii

Hotel Map

T : +1 504 561 1234

F : +1 504 523 0488

hrno.sales@hyatt.com

neworleans.hyatt.com

HYATT REGENCY

NEW ORLEANS

601 Loyola Avenue,

New Orleans, Louisiana 70113

USA

Level Two 13A EMPIRE FOYER EMPIRE FOYER FO STE R RESTROOM RESTRO OM RESTROOM RESTROOM LOBBY ELEVATORS 12B 13B 12A 11B 10B 11A 10A STARBUCKS® LAGNIAPPE EXCHANGE THE EMPIRE BALLROOM BALCONY TO Q SMOKERY & CAFÉ

STAIRS DOWN TO FIRST FLOOR LOBBY

FEDEX OFFICE STAIRS TO THIRD FLOOR

STAIRS TO FIRST FLOOR

1 14 2 3 4 5 9 8 7 6 1 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 D C B A STRAND STRAND BOARDROOMS LOBBY ESCALATORS BOLDEN STRAND FOYER ATRIUM ELEVATORS BALCONY HYATT HOUSE

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS HOTEL: FLOOR PLAN LEVEL TWO

Affiliate Meetings

PS Meetings

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Hotel Map

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS HOTEL: FLOOR PLAN LEVEL THREE

T : +1 504 561 1234

F : +1 504 523 0488

hrno.sales@hyatt.com

neworleans.hyatt.com

HYATT REGENCY

NEW ORLEANS

601 Loyola Avenue,

New Orleans, Louisiana 70113

USA

Level Three STORYVILLE HALL A B D E F G

H THE CELESTIN BALLROOM C

LOBBY ELEVATORS LOBBY ESCALATORS ELITE ESCALATORS ATRIUM ELEVATORS CELESTIN FOYER VITASCOPE HALL SEMI PRIVATE DINING NORTH WING ELEVATORS W ES T E N D BRAS S

STAIRS TO SECOND FLOOR

W EST EN D BRASS PRIVATE DINING DISPLAY KITCHEN TO NORTH WING 8 BLOCK KITCHEN & BAR

RE STR O OM S FREIGHT ELEVATOR STAIRS TO FOURTH FLOOR 06.15

PS Meetings

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Hotel Map

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS HOTEL: FLOOR PLAN LEVEL FOUR

T : +1 504 561 1234 F : +1 504 523 0488 hrno.sales@hyatt.com neworleans.hyatt.com

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS 601 Loyola Avenue,

New Orleans, Louisiana 70113 USA Level Four ATRIUM ELEVATORS STAIRS TO THIRD FLOOR 3 2 1 RELIANCE BOARDROOM RESTROOMS RESTROOMS RELIANCE 1-5 1 2 3 4 5 4 5A 5B 5C 5D 6 7 8 10 9 11 12 IMPERIAL IMPERIAL BOARDROOMS 1718 DESIGN CENTER 06.15

Affiliate Meetings

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Michael Jacob Kahana

University of Pennsylvania, USA

Michael Jacob Kahana is a professor

of psychology and director of the

Computational Memory Lab at the

University of Pennsylvania . His work

combines behavioral, neural, and

computational approaches to the study of

human memory . Kahana received a PhD

from the University of Toronto in 1993

under the mentorship of Bennet B . Murdock and Endel Tulving

who inspired his work to develop a computational framework that

could explain Tulving’s conception of mental time travel using a

distributed, associative memory model . His postdoctoral training

at Harvard University was under the mentorship of William K .

Estes . Before joining the faculty at Penn in 2004, Kahana was a

member of the psychology department at Brandeis University .

He is the recipient of the Troland Research Award and Howard

Crosby Warren Medal . His 2012 Foundations of Human Memory

provides an introduction to the interplay between theory and data

in the laboratory study of human memory .

Sharon L. Thompson-Schill

University of Pennsylvania, USA

Sharon L . Thompson-Schill is the

Christopher H . Browne Distinguished

Professor of Psychology at the University

of Pennsylvania, where she is currently

the chair of the Department of Psychology

and the founding director of MindCORE,

Penn’s hub for the integrative study

of the mind . Thompson-Schill’s lab

studies the biological bases of human cognitive systems in both

healthy and brain-damaged individuals . She received her PhD

from Stanford University in 1996 and is the recipient of the

Searle Scholars Award, the Young Investigator Award from the

Cognitive Neuroscience Society, the Women in Cognitive Science

Mentorship Award, a James McKeen Cattell Fund Fellowship, the

Trustees Council of Penn Women Advising Award, and Penn’s

highest teaching honors, the Lindback Award for Distinguished

Teaching and the Provost’s Award for Distinguished PhD Teaching

and Mentoring .

2018 Mid-Career Awards

The Psychonomic Society

Announces the Recipients of the

The newly created Psychonomic Society Mid-Career Award is given for exceptional contributions to the field of experimental and cognitive psychology and related areas by an individual who is currently in the middle of their career. The purpose is to raise the visibility of our science and of our very best mid-career scientists within the field, within the awardees’ institutions, in the press, and in the larger community. Many universities are carefully scrutinizing departments and programs in deciding upon the deployment of limited resources, and among the most important criteria are those that indicate academic and scientific quality.

2018 Awards Committee:

Penny M. Pexman, chair; Teresa Bajo, Aaron Benjamin, Marc Brysbaert, Tania Lombrozo, Evan Risko, Duane Watson, and Jessica Witt.

INAUGURAL

2018

MID-CAREER

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Laura Mickes

Royal Holloway, University of London,

United Kingdom

Dr . Mickes’s research has focused on enhancing understanding of basic and applied aspects of recognition memory . Her basic research integrated dual process theory and signal detection theory, and her applied research successfully challenged longstanding and seemingly settled notions about the proper way to conduct police lineups and about the relationship between eyewitness confidence and accuracy . Her work has already had a significant influence on real-world policy, and it underscores the often-unrealized potential of bridging basic and applied research .

Karl Szpunar

University of Illinois at Chicago, USA

Dr . Szpunar’s research program uses novel behavioral and neuroimaging techniques to identify adaptive uses on memory in future-oriented cognition and education . His research on future thinking aims to elucidate mechanisms that give rise to prospective cognitions about the personal and collective future . His educational research is focused on developing interventions that can reduce inattentive mind wandering and optimize learning from extended study sequences such as classroom lectures .

Edward Vul

University of California, San Diego, USA

STEVEN YANTIS EARLY CAREER AWARD

RECIPIENT

Dr . Vul has been an associate professor at the University of California, San Diego Psychology Department since receiving his PhD in Cognitive Science at MIT . His research uses computational models and behavioral experiments to formally characterize how people can exhibit rich, adaptive behavior in the face of incomplete and uncertain information in everyday life .

Liane Young

Boston College, USA

Dr . Young uses methods from social psychology and neuroscience (i .e ., functional neuroimaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation), to investigate moral judgment and social cognition . Recent research in Young’s lab has focused on the psychological and neural basis of distinct moral norms (e .g ., harm, purity) and the role of theory of mind across social contexts (e .g ., cooperation, competition) . Ongoing work examines human virtue and the role of reason in moral judgment and decision-making .

2018 Early Career Awards

The Psychonomic Society

Announces the Recipients of the

The Psychonomic Society Early Career Award recognizes exceptional research accomplishments among our members. Nominees must have completed their terminal degree (typically PhD) within the last ten years and must be a Fellow or Member of the Society. Nominations are made by members of the Society, and each candidate must be endorsed by two members. Up to four awards can be made each year. One nominee, whose research is closest to the areas of perception and attention, will receive the Steven Yantis Early Career Award. Selection of the awards is made by a committee consisting of members of the Governing Board and other members of the Society.

2018 Awards Committee:

Penny M. Pexman, chair; Teresa Bajo, Aaron Benjamin, Marc Brysbaert, Tania Lombrozo, Evan Risko, Duane Watson, and Jessica Witt.

2018

EARLY CAREER

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2018 Graduate Travel Awards

2018

GRADUATE

TRAVEL

AWARD

The Psychonomic

Society

Announces the

Recipients of the

The Psychonomic Society Program Committee selected 20 Graduate Travel Awards based on the quality of the abstracts submitted by Graduate Student Members of the Society for the 2018 Annual Meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA .

Each recipient receives a travel stipend of $1,000 USD and will be recognized at the Business Meeting in Bolden 6, 2nd Floor, on Saturday, November 17, 2018, at 5:00 p .m .

2018 Program Committee: Edward Awh, Marc Brysbaert, Laura Carlson, Stephen Mitroff, Kristi Multhaup, Duane Watson, and Reed Hunt .

Please join the Program Committee in congratulating these recipients . Visit www .psychonomic .org/ awards for more information .

Melisa Akan

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

Abstract #4162:The Effect of Prior Familiarity and Conceptual Knowledge on Face Recognition Accuracy

Johnathan E. Avery

Indiana University, USA

Abstract #5156: Representation and Retrieval in Semantic Memory

Christina Bejjani

Duke University, USA

Abstract #5052:Causal Transfer of Specific Attentional Control States

Chloe Callahan-Flintoft

Pennsylvania State University, USA

Abstract #3020: Exploring the Influence of Feature Autocorrelation on Attentional

Sampling

Shauna P. A. de Long

Kent State University, USA

Abstract #1025:Does Learning the Meaning of a Word Make Spelling Easier? Evidence from

Incidental Word Learning During Reading

Blake L. Elliott

Arizona State University, USA

Abstract #2205: Neural Correlates Underlying the Effect of Value on Recognition Memory

Encoding

Nathaniel R. Greene

University of Missouri, USA

Abstract #5093: Age-Related Changes Across Time in Verbatim and Gist Memory for

Face-Scene Pairs

Anna Foerster

University of Würzburg, Germany

Abstract #5051:Better Safe Than Sorry: Response Monitoring in Dishonesty

Chun-Yuan Huang

National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan

Abstract #5042:System Factorial Technology Provides New Insights on Hybrid Search

Haena Kim

Texas A&M University, USA

Abstract #2100: Neural Mechanisms of Reduced Inhibitory Control Following Associative

Reward Learning

Pascal J. Kieslich

University of Mannheim, Germany

Abstract #1234:Design Factors in Mouse-Tracking: What Makes a Difference?

Krista D. Manley

Iowa State University, USA

Abstract #4161: When Less Is More: Showing Masked Faces in a Lineup Enhances

Identification of a Masked Face

Matthew P. McCurdy

University of Illinois at Chicago, USA

Abstract #1055:Theories of the Generation Effect and the Impact of Generation Constraint: A

Meta-Analytic Review

Casey L. Roark

Carnegie Mellon University, USA

Abstract #3175: Factors Influencing Incidental Category Learning

Tomer Sahar

Tel-Aviv University, Israel

Abstract #5024: Modeling Posner’s Validity Effect Reveals Less Guessing, but Not Enhanced

Precision

Julia S. Soares

University of California, Santa Cruz, USA

Abstract #4238:Volitional Photography Inflates Metamemory Confidence but Still Causes an

Impairment in Memory

Chunyue Teng

The George Washington University, USA

Abstract #1215:Uncovering the Shared Representation Between Visual Working Memory

(VWM) and Perception: Neural Tuning Curves

Ngoc-Han Tran

University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract #1108: Empirical Priors for Evidence Accumulation Models

Christine E. Weber

University of South Carolina, USA

Abstract #2117: The Role of Liking in Evaluative Conditioning of Affective States

Laura Werner

University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA

Abstract #4215:Forgetting Distractors: Evidence of Inhibition and Decay in Working Memory Depends

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Breanna Crane

Vanderbilt University, USA

Abstract #3046: Does Time Pressure Increase

Myopic Choice?

Babak Hemmatian

Brown University, USA

Abstract #3078: Explaining Without

Information: The Role of Label Entrenchment

Reina Mizrahi

University of California, San Diego, USA

Abstract #1084: Two Languages or One:

Language as a Cue for Talker Identification in

3- To 5-Year Old Children

Jonathan Rann

University of South Carolina, USA

Abstract #2228: Effects of Conversation on

Driving Simulator Performance

José A. Rodas

University College Dublin, United Kingdom/

University of Guayquil, Ecuador

Abstract #1002: Supporting Evidence that

Response and Attentional Inhibition Are Not

Sharing the Same Capacity in an Ecuadorian

Sample

Tanja C. Roembke

University of Iowa, USA

Abstract #1031: Modeling the Effects of

Similarity and Variability in a Complex Task:

Effects of Blocking Without Attention?

2018 Student Travel Awards

The Psychonomic Society

Announces the Recipients of the

The Psychonomic Society Diversity & Inclusion Committee selected six J. Frank Yates Student Travel Awards based on the quality of the abstracts submitted by Graduate Student Members of the Society for the 2018 Annual Meeting in New Orleans, LA, USA. Each recipient receives a travel stipend of $1,000 USD and will be recognized at the Business Meeting in Bolden 6, 3rd Floor, on Saturday, November 17, 2018 at 5:00 p.m.

Diversity and Inclusion Committee: Valerie Reyna, chair; Laura Carlson, Ivy Defoe, Jean Fox Tree, Alejandro Lleras, Penny M. Pexman, and Travis Seymour.

Please join the Diversity & Inclusion Committee in congratulating these recipients. Visit www.psychonomic.org/ awards for more information.

2018

J. FRANK YATES

STUDENT TRAVEL

SUPPORTING DIVERSITY & INCLUSION

IN COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY

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Psychonomic Society

The Psychonomic Society Clifford T. Morgan Best Article Award recognizes the best article published in each of the

Psychonomic Society’s journals in 2018. Selections are made by the editorial team of each journal. Award recipients (the

lead author) will receive a certificate and honorarium of $1,000 USD and will be recognized at the Business Meeting in

Bolden 6, 2nd Floor, on Saturday, November 17, 2018, at 5:00 p.m.

2018 CLIFFORD T. MORGAN

BEST ARTICLE AWARD RECIPIENTS

Sponsored by Springer

2018 Best Article Awards

Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics (Editor: Michael Dodd) Daryl Fougnie, Jurnell Cockhren, René Marois

“A common source of attention for auditory and visual tracking” doi: 10 .3758/s13414-018-1524-9

Behavior Research Methods (Editor: Michael Jones) Geoff Hollis, Chris Westbury

“When is best-worst best? A comparison of best-worst scaling, numeric estimation, and rating scales for collection of semantic norms”

doi .org/10 .3758/s13428-017-1009-0

Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (Editor: Marie Banich) Elisabeth Schreuders, Eduard T . Klapwijk, Geet-Jan Will, Berna Güroglu

“Friend versus foe: Neural correlates of prosocial decisions for liked and disliked peers” doi .org/10 .3758/s13415-017-0557-1

Cognitive Research: Principles & Implications (Editor: Jeremy Wolfe) Jet G. Sanders, Rob Jenkins

“Individual differences in hyper-realistic mask detection” doi .org/10 .1186/s41235-018-0118-3

Learning & Behavior (Editor: Jonathon Crystal)

Ludwig Huber, Natálie Popavová, Sabine Riener, Kaja Salobir, Giulia Cimarelli (in press, 2018)

“Would dogs copy irrelevant actions from their human caregiver?” doi: 10 .3758/s13420-018-0336-z

Memory & Cognition (Editor: Neil Mulligan)

Caoimhe Harrington Stack, Arie N . James, Duane G . Watson

“A failure to replicate rapid syntactic adaptation in comprehension” doi .org/10 .3758/s13421-018-0808-6

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review (Editor: Gregory Hickok)

Nadine Lavan, A . Mike Burton, Sophie K . Scott, Carolyn McGettigan

“Flexible voices: Identity perception from variable vocal signals” doi: 10 .3758/s13423-018-1497-7

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Special Events

The Psychonomic Society

2018 SPECIAL EVENTS

Encouraging Future Scientists: Supporting Undergraduates at Psychonomics (UP)

Chaired by Ruthann Thomas, Hendrix College; Sharda Umanath, Claremont McKenna College; Jen Coane, Colby

College; Katherine White, Rhodes College; Brooke Lea, Macalester College

Friday, November 16, 12:00 p.m.-1:30 p.m.

Bring your lunch to Strand 12 A/B, 2nd floor

This lunchtime workshop will welcome and support undergraduate students as they navigate the conference and explore

potential careers in cognitive psychology. This session includes (a) “Psychonomics 101”, an overview of the conference with

a focus on networking at coffee, drinks, dinners, and other opportunities, (b) a career development panel with a question

and answer session, and (c) networking time with panelists, recent recipients of graduate fellowships, and icons in the

field. The career development panel will feature speakers and panelists from a variety of backgrounds and at different stages

in their careers, including graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, academic faculty, and cognitive psychologists working

in industry and policy. This session is designed for undergraduates and for faculty who mentor undergraduates. Early

graduate students and recent recipients of graduate fellowships are also welcome and encouraged to attend.

Diversity & Inclusion Reception

Supported by the Psychonomic Society Diversity & Inclusion Committee

Friday, November 16, 4:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.

Strand 10 A/B, 2nd Floor

As the preeminent society for the experimental study of cognition, the Psychonomic Society celebrates scientific merit and

the diversity of researchers in the field and the Society. Please join members of the Governing Board and the Diversity &

Inclusion Committee for a wine and cheese reception open to all scientists, including graduate students, early- and

mid-career investigators, and senior researchers.

Psychonomics Digital Activities

Chaired by Stephan Lewandowski, University of Bristol, and Cassandra Jacobs, University of California, Irvine

Saturday, November 17, 12:00 p.m.-1:30 p.m.

Bring your lunch to Strand 12 A/B, 2nd floor

The Psychonomic Society has been committed to enhancing its online digital profile through social media, in particular

Twitter and the Society’s Featured Content blog (featuredcontent.psychonomic.org). Although those initiatives have

resulted in considerable scholarly discussion, for example through the series of “digital events” (http://featuredcontent.

psychonomic.org/digital-events/), the power of social media is perhaps underappreciated by the membership. The purpose

of this workshop is to expand the Society’s social-media engagement and to acquaint the membership with web-based or

app-based applications that can facilitate public engagement, scholarly presentations, and teaching. Most of the workshop

will involve hands-on exposure to a number of smart online apps and websites that provide productivity tools and

opportunities for audience engagement. The workshop should broaden attendees’ understanding of the many free (or at

least affordable) tools that are offered by the internet for scholars, teachers, and communicators.

Graduate Student Social

Supported by the Psychonomic Society

Friday, November 16, 9:00 p.m.-12:00 midnight

Dave & Buster’s, 1200 Poydras St, Unit 601, New Orleans, LA 70113

Kick back and relax as you meet other graduate students at Dave & Buster’s, where you’ll enjoy light hors d’oeuvres and one drink ticket will

be handed out per person (limited availability). Bring appropriate ID and PS name badge. You must be 21 years old to consume alcoholic

beverages in New Orleans.

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Psychonomic Society Members

July 1, 2017 - July 1, 2018

IN MEMORIAM

To read the obituaries of the members above, please visit our website at www.psychonomic.org/obituaries.

The Psychonomic Society would like to honor members by listing obituaries on its website.

If you know of a member of our community who has recently passed away,

please contact Colin MacLeod at cmacleod@uwaterloo.ca with information.

In Memoriam

Anne Treisman (1935-2018)

Anne Treisman died February 9, 2018, at age 82; she had been in declining health for the past few years. Anne was a

towering figure in the field of attention. Anne taught at Oxford, University of British Columbia, Berkeley, and Princeton.

Her early work shaped our understanding of auditory attention with her dichotic listening experiments and Attenuation

Theory. When she turned to visual attention, her visual search experiments and her seminal Feature Integration Theory

propelled decades of research. Treisman was elected to the Royal Society of London in 1989, the US National Academy of

Sciences in 1994, and was the recipient of the 2009 Grawemeyer Award. In 2013, Treisman received the National Medal

of Science from President Obama. She was at once a rigorous and a generous colleague and mentor and will be greatly

missed. Anne is survived by her husband, Daniel Kahneman, and her children and grandchildren. • written by Jeremy Wolfe

Jerry Fodor (1935-2017)

Jerry Fodor passed away on November 29, 2017, at age 82. Across his career, as a faculty member first at MIT, then at

CUNY, and, finally, at Rutgers, Jerry consistently offered up seminal thinking that spanned and greatly impacted both

philosophy and cognitive science. Among his many contributions, his 1975 The Language of Thought continues to

shape how we understand mental representations and his 1983 The Modularity of Mind is a landmark for articulating

fundamental questions about the functional architecture of the mind and brain. In addition to his outsized influence on

modern cognitive science and cognitive neuroscience, Jerry had a wit and personality to match: He was a very engaging

speaker and his writing is highly readable. Jerry once famously remarked “On my bad days, I sometimes wonder what

philosophers are for.” On his good days, which were many, Jerry demonstrated exactly what philosophers are for:

challenging our assumptions and providing insight into the big questions. • written by Michael Tarr

Elizabeth Deutsch Capaldi Phillips (1945-2017)

Betty Capaldi Phillips passed away on September 23, 2017, at 72. Betty enjoyed a remarkable career. After receiving

her PhD at the University of Texas, she rose through the ranks to professor at Purdue University, becoming department

head and associate dean of the graduate school. She later served as provost of three universities (Florida, Buffalo, and

Arizona State). Betty’s research centered on motivational effects in eating, studied in rats and humans. She served on the

Psychonomic Society governing board (1992-1997), and as president of the Association for Psychological Science and the

Midwestern Psychological Association. Betty was a highly effective administrator wherever she went. When she retired

as provost at ASU, she created an entertaining and educational PBS TV show, Eating Psychology with Betty. • written by

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2018

APCAM

The 17th Annual Auditory

Perception, Cognition,

and Action Meeting

Who We Are

The goal of APCAM is to bring together

researchers from various theoretical

perspectives to present focused research

on auditory cognition, perception, and

aurally guided action. APCAM is a unique

meeting in its broad inclusion of basic and

applied research that targets multiple levels

of processing, theoretical perspectives, and

methodologies.

APCAM is supported in part by the Auditory

Perception, Cognition, and Action Research

Foundation, and accepted abstracts will

receive consideration for invitation to submit

a manuscript for the following year’s annual

issue of Auditory Perception & Cognition

highlighting work from APCAM.

Join Us

Date:

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Location:

Hyatt Regency New Orleans

Strand 11B, 2nd Floor

Registration: 8:00 a.m.

outside room entrance

Time:

8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

Organizers

Timothy Hubbard (chair)

Laura Getz (co-chair)

Devin McAuley

Kristopher Patten

Peter Pfordresher

Julia Strand

For more information, including a call for abstracts, see www.apcam.us

Abstract Submission Deadline: September 17, 2018

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CPC Announcement

Configural Processing Consortium

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

The Configural Processing Consortium (CPC) is an annual

workshop bringing together

researchers in configural processing. We aim to tackle deep issues

underpinning perceptual organization, cognition, and action, as well as the most cutting edge theoretical and experimental research on configural topics. Although vision typically dominates, our interests include all modalities.

Each year, we seek to both define the major problems underlying the field of configural processing and to develop more unified ways of approaching these problems.

www.configural.org

Organizing Committee

Department of Psychology

Funding and Support

CPC

2018

HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS

New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Mary Peterson (President 2016-2019) Karen Schloss (Secretary/Treasurer) Julie Markant (Local Host)

Leslie Blaha, Ami Eidels, Joseph Houpt, Ruth Kimchi, James Pomerantz, James Townsend

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International Association

of Metacognition

The Study of Metacognition

Research on metacognition involves the study of what people know about their own

cognition. Approaches to investigating metacognition include cognitive experiments,

the study of individual differences, neuroimaging, educational applications, and

computational modeling, and includes special populations defined by neuropsychological,

clinical, life-span, and developmental dimensions.

Within cognitive psychology, the field of metacognition research has grown substantially

in recent years. A scientific understanding of “cognition in the wild” will ultimately require

an appreciation not just of the abilities and proclivities of cognitive agents, but also

the metacognitive monitoring and control processes that guide the development and

refinement of those skills and behaviors.

Organizers

Colleen Kelley

Nate Kornell

2018 BIANNUAL MEETING

Join Us

Date:

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Location:

Hyatt Regency New Orleans

Strand 12 A/B, 2nd Floor

Time:

12:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Keynote:

Aaron S. Benjamin

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

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OPAM Announcement

Join us in New Orleans to

celebrate outstanding research

by graduate and post-doctoral

scientists at the annual

workshop for Object Perception,

Attention, and Memory.

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Hyatt Regency New Orleans

Celestin F & G, 3rd Floor

7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Keynote address by

Dr. Wei Ji Ma

New Orleans, Louisiana

:26

Visit www.opam.net

for more details.

Organizers:

Caitlin Mullin

Briana Kennedy

Steve Walenchok

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SCIP Announcement

The 48

th

Annual Meeting of

the Society for Computers in Psychology

2018 Presidential Symposium Theme: One Law to Rule Them All:

Statistical Learning as Psychological Explanation

Thursday, November 15, 2018, 9am – 6pm, Room Strand 11A

Hyatt Regency New Orleans • New Orleans, Louisiana

Dr. Harald Baayen

Department of Linguistics

University of Tübingen

Throwing off the shackles of the morpheme with

simple linear mappings

Keynote:

Dr. Marc Brysbaert

Department of Experimental Psychology.

Ghent University

Big data in language research: New findings, new

challenges

President’s symposium:

Dr. Paul Thagard

Department of Philosophy

University of Waterloo

How does current AI measure up to human

intelligence?

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SJDM Announcement

November 17-19, 2018

at the Hyatt Regency New Orleans

On-site registration November 17th at 8.00 am

The Society for Judgment and Decision Making is an interdisciplinary

academic organization dedicated to the study of normative,

descriptive, and prescriptive theories of judgments and decisions.

Its members include psychologists, economists, organizational

researchers, decision analysts, and other decision researchers.

The Society’s primary event is its Annual Meeting, at which Society

members present their research. It also publishes the journal

Judgment and Decision Making.

For more information, including registration fees and timetable,

see www.sjdm.org

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CURRENT TRENDS IN MATHEMATICAL PSYCHOLOGY

A symposium organized by the Society for Mathematical Psychology

Hosts: Clintin Davis-Stober, Pernille Hemmer

Thursday, November 15, 2018

The Society for Mathematical Psychology promotes the advancement and communication

of research in mathematical psychology and related disciplines. Mathematical psychology is

broadly defined to include work of a theoretical character that uses mathematical methods,

formal logic, or computer simulation.

S

ympoSium

S

chedule

9:00

Opening remarks

9:05-10:05 Session I: Modeling episodic memory

10:05

Break until 10:35

10:35-11:15 Session I continued: Modeling episodic memory

11:15

Lunch until 13:00

13:00

Poster session until 14:15

14:15-15:30 Session II: Modeling decision making

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SPARK Announcement

SPARK Announcement

All Are Welcome

Date:

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Time:

2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Location: Hyatt Regency New Orleans

Strand 3, 2nd Floor

Panelists & Organizers:

Ayanna Thomas - Tufts University

Jean E. Fox Tree - University of California Santa Cruz

Alejandro Lleras - University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Duane Watson - Vanderbilt University

The aims of the SPARK Society are to increase the representation

of people of African, Latinx, and Native American heritage

in cognitive psychology, to educate the broader community

about attracting and retaining underrepresented minority

scholars in cognitive psychology, and to mentor members of

these communities at all stages of their careers. This inaugural

meeting of the SPARK Society will feature a panel on navigating

academia as a scholar from an underrepresented minority group.

For more information, email duane.g.watson@vanderbilt.edu

Inaugural Meeting of the

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TRG Announcement

Join us for our annual meeting

to be held on

Thursday, November 15, 2018

at the Hyatt Regency New Orleans

Strand 4, 2nd Floor

from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

From its humble beginning as a handful of colleagues sitting on beds in a hotel room discussing research on the

perception of touch, the TRG has become an international collection of over 100 people conducting research

on a wide variety of topics related to tactile perception. Our members come from both academia and industry

and span a wide range of exciting topics including tactile acuity in the blind, haptic interfaces for driving and

aviation, simulation of object texture in VR, sensory integration, synesthesia and haptic space perception.

The purpose of the TRG is to facilitate interaction between tactile researchers and to provide a venue to share

new research findings. This is primarily achieved through the TRG annual meeting held in conjunction with

the meeting of the Psychonomic Society.

Your organizers,

Brendan Stanley and Kaian Unwalla

For more information or to be added to our mailing list,

email: tactileresearchgroup@gmail.com

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WICS Announcement

The Whys and Hows of Sexual Harassment:

What Organizations Should be Doing

Vicki Magley

vicki.magley@uconn.edu

University of Connecticut

Sponsored by Women in Cognitive Science*

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Meeting: 4-6 pm; Location: Celestin H

Social Hour & Speed Mentoring: 6-7 pm; Location: Celestin Foyer D-H

Sexual harassment is more likely to occur within an organizational context in which women are

in the minority and are in less powerful positions (job-gender context) and in which sexual

harassment is tolerated (organizational climate; c.f., Fitzgerald, Drasgow, Hulin, Gelfand &

Magley, 1997). Understanding why sexual harassment occurs is of great importance for how

organizations might prevent sexual harassment, as well as how they can (and should)

appropriately respond to reports of harassment in an effort to alleviate the negative

consequences of such mistreatment.

Reference

Fitzgerald, L.F., Drasgow, F., Hulin, C.L., Gelfand, M.J., & Magley, V.J. (1997). The

antecedents and consequences of sexual harassment in organizations: A test of an integrated

model. Journal of Applied Psychology, 82, 578-589.

Discussion and Audience Q&A to Follow Until 6 pm

Social Hour and Speed Mentoring from 6-7 pm

* WiCS is affiliated with the Psychonomic Society and its activities are

funded by the Perception Action and Cognition program at the National

Science Foundation.

Find us on:

http://www.womenincogsci.org/

Twitter @WomenInCogSci

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NOTES

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Condensed Schedule A

THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 15, 2018

POSTER SESSION I ...4:00 PM-7:30 PM Elite A (Author present between 6:00 PM-7:30 PM) Attention I (1001-1020)

Reading (1021-1044)

Human Learning and Instruction I (1045-1068) Bilingualism I (1069-1090)

Decision Making (1091-1112) Discourse Processes (1113-1125) Emotion and Cognition I (1126-1147)

Letter/Word Processing I (1148-1167) False Memory I (1168-1183) Recall I (1184-1200)

Working Memory I (1201-1223) Sensation and Perception I (1224-1231) Statistics and Methodology I (1232-1241)

FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 16, 2018

Automatic Processing (1-5)...8:00 AM-9:40 AM Celestin D Judgment (6-10)... 8:00 AM-9:40 AM Strand 13 AB Discourse Processes (11-16) ...8:00 AM-10:00 AM Celestin A Embodied Cognition (17-21) ...8:00 AM-9:40 AM Celestin F Forensic Science and Eyewitness Identification (22-27) ...8:00 AM-10:00 AM Celestin BC Statistics and Methodology (28-33) ...8:00 AM-10:00 AM Celestin GH SYMPOSIUM I: Generalization in Language and Memory (34-39) ...10:00 AM-12:00 PM Celestin E Bilingualism I (40-44) ...10:20 AM-12:00 PM Celestin A Associative Learning and Recall (45-49) ...10:20 AM-12:00 PM Celestin BC Working Memory I (50-54) ...10:20 AM-12:00 PM Celestin GH Concepts and Categories (55-60) ... 10:00 AM-12:00 PM Celestin F Psycholinguistics (61-66) ... 10:00 AM-12:00 PM Celestin D

FRIDAY NOON, NOVEMBER 16, 2018

POSTER SESSION II ...11:00 AM-1:30 PM Elite A (Author present between 12:00 PM-1:30 PM) Animal Learning & Cognition (2001-2013)

Automatic Processing (2014-2029) Attention Capture (2030-2040)

Attention: Individual Differences and Divided Attention (2041-2062)

Music Cognition (2063-2077)

Reasoning & Problem Solving (2078-2098)

Reward, Motivation, and Decision Making (2099-2117) Psycholinguistics I (2118-2143)

Letter/Word Processing II (2144-2163) Test Effects (2164-2183)

Recognition Memory I (2184-2206) Spatial Cognition (2207-2224)

Perception, Memory, and Action (2225-2247)

FRIDAY NOON, NOVEMBER 16, 2018

Lunchtime Workshop: Encouraging Future Scientists:

Supporting Undergraduates at Psychonomics (UP) ...12:00 PM-1:30 PM Bring your lunch to Strand 12 A/B, 2nd floor

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 16, 2018

SYMPOSIUM II: Should Statistics Determine the Practice of Science, or Science Determine

the Practice of Statistics? (67-72) ...1:30 PM-3:30 PM Celestin E Recognition Memory (73-78) ...1:30 PM-3:30 PM Celestin BC Decision Making I (79-83) ...1:30 PM-3:10 PM Celestin GH Music Cognition (84-88) ... 1:30 PM-3:10 PM Celestin A Letter/Word Processing (89-94) ...1:30 PM-3:30 PM Celestin F Attention Capture (95-99) ... 1:30 PM-3:10 PM Celestin D SYMPOSIUM III: Leading Edge Workshop—Time for Action: Reaching for a Better

Understanding of the Dynamics of Cognition (100-105) ... 3:30 PM-5:30 PM Celestin D Cognition and Emotion (106-110) ...3:50 PM-5:30 PM Celestin F Sensation and Perception I (111-116) ... 3:30 PM-5:30 PM Celestin A

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