Diana Deacon

Affiliations: 
City University of New York, New York, NY, United States 
Area:
Cognitive Psychology, Physiological Psychology, Psychobiology Psychology
Google:
"Diana Deacon"
Mean distance: 35622
 
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Deacon D, Shelley-Tremblay JF, Ritter W, et al. (2013) Electrophysiological evidence for the action of a center-surround mechanism on semantic processing in the left hemisphere. Frontiers in Psychology. 4: 936
Grose-Fifer J, Deacon D. (2004) Priming by natural category membership in the left and right cerebral hemispheres. Neuropsychologia. 42: 1948-60
Deacon D, Grose-Fifer J, Yang CM, et al. (2004) Evidence for a new conceptualization of semantic representation in the left and right cerebral hemispheres. Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior. 40: 467-78
Molholm S, Gomes H, Lobosco J, et al. (2004) Feature versus gestalt representation of stimuli in the mismatch negativity system of 7- to 9-year-old children. Psychophysiology. 41: 385-93
Deacon D, Grose-Fifer J, Hewitt S, et al. (2004) Physiological evidence that a masked unrelated intervening item disrupts semantic priming: implications for theories of semantic representation and retrieval models of semantic priming. Brain and Language. 89: 38-46
Deacon D, Dynowska A, Ritter W, et al. (2004) Repetition and semantic priming of nonwords: implications for theories of N400 and word recognition. Psychophysiology. 41: 60-74
Deacon D, Shelley-Tremblay J. (2000) How automatically is meaning accessed: a review of the effects of attention on semantic processing. Frontiers in Bioscience : a Journal and Virtual Library. 5: E82-94
Deacon D, Gomes H, Nousak JM, et al. (2000) Effect of frequency separation and stimulus rate on the mismatch negativity: an examination of the issue of refractoriness in humans. Neuroscience Letters. 287: 167-70
Deacon D, Hewitt S, Yang C, et al. (2000) Event-related potential indices of semantic priming using masked and unmasked words: evidence that the N400 does not reflect a post-lexical process. Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research. 9: 137-46
Deacon D, Uhm TJ, Ritter W, et al. (1999) The lifetime of automatic semantic priming effects may exceed two seconds. Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research. 7: 465-72
See more...