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Jason C K Chan

Showing results (21-30 of 42) with videos related to

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Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|December 18, 2018
Do masked-face lineups facilitate eyewitness identification of a masked individual?Krista D Manley, Jason C K Chan, Gary L Wells
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications|June 11, 2021
Does expressive writing or an instructional intervention reduce the impacts of test anxiety in a college classroom?Sarah J Myers, Sara D Davis, Jason C K Chan
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review|August 28, 2023
Guessing as a learning intervention: A meta-analytic review of the prequestion effectKyle J St Hilaire, Jason C K Chan, Dahwi Ahn
Psychological Science|November 29, 2008
Recalling a witnessed event increases eyewitness suggestibility: the reversed testing effectJason C K Chan, Ayanna K Thomas, John B Bulevich
Cerebral Cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)|November 5, 2008
Contextual processing in episodic future thoughtKarl K Szpunar, Jason C K Chan, Kathleen B McDermott
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|November 8, 2006
Retrieval-induced facilitation: initially nontested material can benefit from prior testing of related materialJason C K Chan, Kathleen B McDermott, Henry L Roediger
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|September 5, 2013
Retrieval enhances eyewitness suggestibility to misinformation in free and cued recallMiko M Wilford, Jason C K Chan, Sam J Tuhn
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition|January 27, 2015
Retrieval induces forgetting, but only when nontested items compete for retrieval: Implication for interference, inhibition, and context reinstatementJason C K Chan, Matthew R Erdman, Sara D Davis
Frontiers in Psychology|September 11, 2023
Experimental and meta-analytic evidence that source variability of misinformation does not increase eyewitness suggestibility independently of repetition of misinformationRachel O'Donnell, Jason C K Chan, Jeffrey L Foster, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|May 2, 2024
The magnitude of the testing effect is independent of retrieval practice performanceJason C K Chan, Sara D Davis, Aslı Yurtsever, et al.
Pageof 5

Showing results (21-30 of 42) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 5
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|December 18, 2018
Do masked-face lineups facilitate eyewitness identification of a masked individual?Krista D Manley, Jason C K Chan, Gary L Wells
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications|June 11, 2021
Does expressive writing or an instructional intervention reduce the impacts of test anxiety in a college classroom?Sarah J Myers, Sara D Davis, Jason C K Chan
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review|August 28, 2023
Guessing as a learning intervention: A meta-analytic review of the prequestion effectKyle J St Hilaire, Jason C K Chan, Dahwi Ahn
Psychological Science|November 29, 2008
Recalling a witnessed event increases eyewitness suggestibility: the reversed testing effectJason C K Chan, Ayanna K Thomas, John B Bulevich
Cerebral Cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)|November 5, 2008
Contextual processing in episodic future thoughtKarl K Szpunar, Jason C K Chan, Kathleen B McDermott
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|November 8, 2006
Retrieval-induced facilitation: initially nontested material can benefit from prior testing of related materialJason C K Chan, Kathleen B McDermott, Henry L Roediger
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|September 5, 2013
Retrieval enhances eyewitness suggestibility to misinformation in free and cued recallMiko M Wilford, Jason C K Chan, Sam J Tuhn
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition|January 27, 2015
Retrieval induces forgetting, but only when nontested items compete for retrieval: Implication for interference, inhibition, and context reinstatementJason C K Chan, Matthew R Erdman, Sara D Davis
Frontiers in Psychology|September 11, 2023
Experimental and meta-analytic evidence that source variability of misinformation does not increase eyewitness suggestibility independently of repetition of misinformationRachel O'Donnell, Jason C K Chan, Jeffrey L Foster, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|May 2, 2024
The magnitude of the testing effect is independent of retrieval practice performanceJason C K Chan, Sara D Davis, Aslı Yurtsever, et al.
Pageof 5