Year |
Citation |
Score |
2018 |
Harris LJ, Cárdenas RA, Stewart ND, Almerigi JB. Are only infants held more often on the left? If so, why? Testing the attention-emotion hypothesis with an infant, a vase, and two chimeric tests, one "emotional," one not. Laterality. 1-33. PMID 29768092 DOI: 10.1080/1357650X.2018.1475482 |
0.787 |
|
2010 |
Harris LJ, Cárdenas RA, Spradlin MP, Almerigi JB. Why are infants held on the left? A test of the attention hypothesis with a doll, a book, and a bag. Laterality. 15: 548-71. PMID 19657952 DOI: 10.1080/13576500903064018 |
0.799 |
|
2009 |
Harris LJ, Cardénas RA, Spradlin MP, Almerigi JB. Adults' preferences for side-of-hold as portrayed in paintings of the Madonna and Child. Laterality. 14: 590-617. PMID 19340631 DOI: 10.1080/13576500902745781 |
0.658 |
|
2009 |
Harris LJ, Almerigi JB. Probing the human brain with stimulating electrodes: the story of Roberts Bartholow's (1874) experiment on Mary Rafferty. Brain and Cognition. 70: 92-115. PMID 19286295 DOI: 10.1016/J.Bandc.2009.01.008 |
0.445 |
|
2008 |
Harris LJ, Cardenas RA, Spradlin MJ, Almerigi JB. Aesthetic preferences for direction of bias in artistic depictions of mothers holding infants Brain and Cognition. 67: 22. DOI: 10.1016/J.Bandc.2008.02.040 |
0.747 |
|
2007 |
Harris LJ, Spradlin MP, Almerigi JB. Mothers' and fathers' lateral biases for holding their newborn infants: a study of images from the World Wide Web. Laterality. 12: 64-86. PMID 17090450 DOI: 10.1080/13576500600948323 |
0.628 |
|
2005 |
Harris LJ, Almerigi JB. The left-side bias for holding human infants: An everyday directional asymmetry in the natural environment Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 28: 600-601. DOI: 10.1017/S0140525X05340106 |
0.658 |
|
2004 |
Weatherill RP, Almerigi JB, Levendosky AA, Bogat GA, von Eye A, Harris LJ. Is maternal depression related to side of infant holding? International Journal of Behavioral Development. 28: 421-427. DOI: 10.1080/01650250444000117 |
0.585 |
|
2002 |
Erber NL, Almerigi JB, Carbary TJ, Harris LJ. The contribution of postural bias to lateral preferences for holding human infants. Brain and Cognition. 48: 352-6. PMID 12030466 |
0.79 |
|
2002 |
Carbary TJ, Almerigi JB, Harris LJ. Task difficulty reduces the left visual hemispace bias for judgments of emotion in chimeric faces. Brain and Cognition. 48: 304-11. PMID 12030457 |
0.755 |
|
2002 |
Almerigi JB, Carbary TJ, Harris LJ. Most adults show opposite-side biases in the imagined holding of infants and objects. Brain and Cognition. 48: 258-63. PMID 12030447 |
0.783 |
|
2001 |
Carbary TJ, Almerigi JB, Harris LJ. The left visual hemispace bias for the perception of chimeric faces: a further test of the difficulty of discrimination hypothesis. Brain and Cognition. 46: 57-62. PMID 11527364 |
0.753 |
|
2001 |
Harris LJ, Almerigi JB, Carbary TJ, Fogel TG. Left-side infant holding: a test of the hemispheric arousal-attentional hypothesis. Brain and Cognition. 46: 159-65. PMID 11527318 DOI: 10.1016/S0278-2626(01)80056-7 |
0.732 |
|
2000 |
Harris LJ, Almerigi JB, Kirsch EA. Side preference in adults for holding infants: contributions of sex and handedness in a test of imagination. Brain and Cognition. 43: 246-52. PMID 10857703 |
0.583 |
|
2000 |
Harris LJ, Almerigi JB. “Finding the Mind's Construction in the Face” Contemporary Psychology. 45: 223-225. DOI: 10.1037/004737 |
0.417 |
|
1999 |
Carbary TJ, Almerigi JB, Harris LJ. The left visual hemispace bias for the perception of composite faces: A test of the difficulty-of-discrimination hypothesis Brain and Cognition. 40: 71-75. |
0.752 |
|
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