Howard Ehrlichman

Affiliations: 
Psychology City University of New York, New York, NY, United States 
Area:
Clinical Psychology, Physiological Psychology
Google:
"Howard Ehrlichman"
Mean distance: 17811
 

Children

Sign in to add trainee
Anne-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
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.

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
See more...