Kristine Ann Kovack-Lesh

Affiliations: 
2008 University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 
Google:
"Kristine Kovack-Lesh"
Mean distance: 17.26 (cluster 15)
 
SNBCP

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Bob McMurray grad student 2008 University of Iowa
 (Exploring joint influences on infant categorization: Previous experience and how infants compare on -line.)
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.

Kovack-Lesh KA, McMurray B, Oakes LM. (2014) Four-month-old infants' visual investigation of cats and dogs: relations with pet experience and attentional strategy. Developmental Psychology. 50: 402-13
McMurray B, Kovack-Lesh KA, Goodwin D, et al. (2013) Infant directed speech and the development of speech perception: enhancing development or an unintended consequence? Cognition. 129: 362-78
Oakes LM, Kovack-Lesh KA. (2013) Infants' Visual Recognition Memory for a Series of Categorically Related Items. Journal of Cognition and Development : Official Journal of the Cognitive Development Society. 4: 63-86
Kovack-Lesh KA, Oakes LM, McMurray B. (2012) Contributions of attentional style and previous experience to 4-month-old infants' categorization. Infancy : the Official Journal of the International Society On Infant Studies. 17: 324-338
Hurley KB, Kovack-Lesh KA, Oakes LM. (2010) The influence of pets on infants' processing of cat and dog images. Infant Behavior & Development. 33: 619-28
Oakes LM, Kovack-Lesh KA, Horst JS. (2009) Two are better than one: comparison influences infants' visual recognition memory. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 104: 124-31
Oakes LM, Horst JS, Kovack-Lesh KA, et al. (2008) How Infants Learn Categories Learning and the Infant Mind
Kovack-Lesh KA, Horst JS, Oakes LM. (2008) The cat is out of the bag: The joint influence of previous experience and looking behavior on infant categorization Infancy. 13: 285-307
Kovack-Lesh KA, Oakes LM. (2007) Hold your horses: how exposure to different items influences infant categorization. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 98: 69-93
See more...