Howard Ehrlichman
Affiliations: | Psychology | City University of New York, New York, NY, United States |
Area:
Clinical Psychology, Physiological PsychologyGoogle:
"Howard Ehrlichman"Mean distance: 17811
Children
Sign in to add traineeAnne-Marie Donovan | grad student | 2003 | CUNY |
Toni A. Kladopoulos | grad student | 2005 | CUNY |
Rebecca S. Chen | grad student | 2007 | CUNY |
Dragana Micic | grad student | 2010 | CUNY |
Amber Sousa | grad student | 2013 | CUNY |
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Publications
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Vrij A, Oliveira J, Hammond A, et al. (2015) Saccadic eye movement rate as a cue to deceit Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. 4: 15-19 |
Ehrlichman H, Micic D. (2012) Why Do People Move Their Eyes When They Think? Current Directions in Psychological Science. 21: 96-100 |
Micic D, Ehrlichman H. (2011) Eye movements in non-visual cognition Eye Movement: Theory, Interpretation, and Disorders. 1-52 |
Micic D, Ehrlichman H, Chen R. (2010) Why do we move our eyes while trying to remember? The relationship between non-visual gaze patterns and memory. Brain and Cognition. 74: 210-24 |
Ehrlichman H, Micic D, Sousa A, et al. (2007) Looking for answers: eye movements in non-visual cognitive tasks. Brain and Cognition. 64: 7-20 |
Ehrlichman H, Barrett J. (1983) 'Random' saccadic eye movements during verbal-linguistic and visual-imaginal tasks Acta Psychologica. 53: 9-26 |
Ehrlichman H, Barrett J. (1983) Right hemispheric specialization for mental imagery: A review of the evidence Brain and Cognition. 2: 55-76 |
Ehrlichman H, Zoccolotti P, Owen D. (1982) Perinatal factors in hand and Eye preference: Data from the collaborative perinatal project International Journal of Neuroscience. 17: 17-22 |
Barrett J, Ehrlichman H. (1982) Bilateral hemispheric alpha activity during visual imagery Neuropsychologia. 20: 703-708 |
Ehrlichman H. (1981) From gaze aversion to eye-movement suppression: An investigation of the cognitive interference explanation of gaze patterns during conversation British Journal of Social Psychology. 20: 233-241 |