Alan Slater

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"Alan Slater"
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Bremner JG, Slater A, Mason U, et al. (2021) Eye tracking provides no evidence that young infants understand path obstruction. Infant Behavior & Development. 65: 101659
Tham DSY, Rees A, Bremner JG, et al. (2020) Orientation Effects in the Development of Linear Object Tracking in Early Infancy. Child Development
Tham DSY, Rees A, Bremner JG, et al. (2018) Auditory information for spatial location and pitch-height correspondence support young infants' perception of object persistence. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
Bremner JG, Slater AM, Mason UC, et al. (2017) Limits of Object Persistence: Young Infants Perceive Continuity of Vertical and Horizontal Trajectories, But Not 45-Degree Oblique Trajectories. Infancy : the Official Journal of the International Society On Infant Studies. 22: 303-322
Bremner JG, Slater AM, Hayes RA, et al. (2017) Young infants' visual fixation patterns in addition and subtraction tasks support an object tracking account. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 162: 199-208
Bremner JG, Slater AM, Mason UC, et al. (2016) Perception of occlusion by young infants: Must the occlusion event be congruent with the occluder? Infant Behavior & Development. 44: 240-248
Bremner JG, Slater AM, Johnson SP. (2015) Perception of object persistence: The origins of object permanence in infancy Child Development Perspectives. 9: 7-13
Walker P, Bremner JG, Mason U, et al. (2014) Preverbal infants are sensitive to cross-sensory correspondences: much ado about the null results of Lewkowicz and Minar (2014). Psychological Science. 25: 835-6
Quinn PC, Tanaka JW, Lee K, et al. (2013) Are Faces Special to Infants? An Investigation of Configural and Featural Processing for the Upper and Lower Regions of Houses in 3- to 7-month-olds. Visual Cognition. 21: 23-37
Heron-Delaney M, Quinn PC, Lee K, et al. (2013) Nine-month-old infants prefer unattractive bodies over attractive bodies. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 115: 30-41
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