Scott Watter
Affiliations: | McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada |
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Publications
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Thomson SJ, Simone AC, Watter S. (2020) Item-specific proportion congruency (ISPC) modulates, but does not generate, the backward crosstalk effect. Psychological Research |
Ptok MJ, Hannah KE, Watter S. (2020) Memory effects of conflict and cognitive control are processing stage-specific: evidence from pupillometry. Psychological Research |
Calic G, Shamy NE, Kinley I, et al. (2020) Subjective semantic surprise resulting from divided attention biases evaluations of an idea's creativity. Scientific Reports. 10: 2144 |
Ptok MJ, Thomson SJ, Humphreys KR, et al. (2019) Congruency Encoding Effects on Recognition Memory: A Stage-Specific Account of Desirable Difficulty. Frontiers in Psychology. 10: 858 |
Lee AMC, Cerisano S, Humphreys KR, et al. (2017) Talking is harder than listening: The time course of dual-task costs during naturalistic conversation. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology = Revue Canadienne De Psychologie Experimentale. 71: 111-119 |
Giammarco M, Thomson SJ, Watter S. (2015) Dual-task backward compatibility effects are episodically mediated. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics |
Thomson SJ, Danis LK, Watter S. (2015) PRP training shows Task1 response selection is the locus of the backward response compatibility effect. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 22: 212-8 |
Vinski MT, Watter S. (2013) Being a grump only makes things worse: a transactional account of acute stress on mind wandering. Frontiers in Psychology. 4: 730 |
Shedden JM, Milliken B, Watter S, et al. (2013) Event-related potentials as brain correlates of item specific proportion congruent effects. Consciousness and Cognition. 22: 1442-55 |
Thomson SJ, Watter S. (2013) Information continuity across the response selection bottleneck: early parallel Task 2 response activation contributes to overt Task 2 performance. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics. 75: 934-53 |