Shane Lindsay, PhD
Affiliations: | University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom |
Google:
"Shane Lindsay"Mean distance: 17.75 (cluster 15) | S | N | B | C | P |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
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. |
Tseng H, Lindsay S, Davis CJ. (2019) Author accepted manuscript: Semantic interpretability does not influence masked priming effects. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2006). 1747021819896766 |
Gaskell MG, Lindsay S. (2019) Reasons to doubt the generalizability, reliability, and diagnosticity of fast mapping (FM) for rapid lexical integration. Cognitive Neuroscience. 1-3 |
O'Connor RJ, Lindsay S, Mather E, et al. (2019) Why would a special FM process exist in adults, when it does not appear to exist in children? Cognitive Neuroscience |
Cairney SA, Lindsay S, Paller KA, et al. (2017) Sleep preserves original and distorted memory traces. Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior. 99: 39-44 |
Cairney SA, Sobczak JM, Lindsay S, et al. (2017) Mechanisms of Memory Retrieval in Slow-Wave Sleep. Sleep. 40 |
Cairney SA, Lindsay S, Sobczak JM, et al. (2016) The Benefits of Targeted Memory Reactivation for Consolidation in Sleep are Contingent on Memory Accuracy and Direct Cue-Memory Associations. Sleep |
Cairney SA, Lindsay S, Sobczak JM, et al. (2016) The benefits of targeted memory reactivation for consolidation in sleep are contingent on memory accuracy and direct cue-memory associations Sleep. 39: 1139-1150 |
Kamide Y, Lindsay S, Scheepers C, et al. (2015) Event Processing in the Visual World: Projected Motion Paths During Spoken Sentence Comprehension. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition |
Tham EK, Lindsay S, Gaskell MG. (2015) Markers of automaticity in sleep-associated consolidation of novel words. Neuropsychologia. 71: 146-57 |
Nakai S, Lindsay S, Ota M. (2015) A prerequisite to L1 homophone effects in L2 spoken-word recognition Second Language Research. 31: 29-52 |