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Keith B Lyle

Showing results (1-10 of 32) with videos related to

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Memory (Hove, England)|January 4, 2018
Effects of handedness consistency and saccade execution on eyewitness memory in cued- and free-recall proceduresKeith B Lyle
Memory (Hove, England)|February 18, 2006
Importing perceived features into false memoriesKeith B Lyle, Marcia K Johnson
Memory & Cognition|October 4, 2007
Source misattributions may increase the accuracy of source judgmentsKeith B Lyle, Marcia K Johnson
Memory (Hove, England)|July 27, 2010
Is saccade-induced retrieval enhancement a potential means of improving eyewitness evidence?Keith B Lyle, Noah E Jacobs
Brain and Cognition|March 15, 2013
The effect of repetitive saccade execution on the attention network test: enhancing executive function with a flick of the eyesJames M Edlin, Keith B Lyle
Laterality|June 6, 2020
Why are consistently-handed individuals more authoritarian? The role of need for cognitive closureKeith B Lyle, Michael C Grillo
Memory (Hove, England)|January 3, 2018
Making remembering more memorableMarcus L Leppanen, Keith B Lyle
Laterality|April 17, 2013
Consistent-handed individuals are more authoritarianKeith B Lyle, Michael C Grillo
Brain and Cognition|May 11, 2010
Bilateral saccades increase intrahemispheric processing but not interhemispheric interaction: Implications for saccade-induced retrieval enhancementKeith B Lyle, Jessica M Martin
Memory (Hove, England)|September 17, 2011
Inconsistent handedness and saccade execution benefit face memory without affecting interhemispheric interactionKeith B Lyle, Alyssa E Orsborn
Pageof 4

Showing results (1-10 of 32) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 4
Memory (Hove, England)|January 4, 2018
Effects of handedness consistency and saccade execution on eyewitness memory in cued- and free-recall proceduresKeith B Lyle
Memory (Hove, England)|February 18, 2006
Importing perceived features into false memoriesKeith B Lyle, Marcia K Johnson
Memory & Cognition|October 4, 2007
Source misattributions may increase the accuracy of source judgmentsKeith B Lyle, Marcia K Johnson
Memory (Hove, England)|July 27, 2010
Is saccade-induced retrieval enhancement a potential means of improving eyewitness evidence?Keith B Lyle, Noah E Jacobs
Brain and Cognition|March 15, 2013
The effect of repetitive saccade execution on the attention network test: enhancing executive function with a flick of the eyesJames M Edlin, Keith B Lyle
Laterality|June 6, 2020
Why are consistently-handed individuals more authoritarian? The role of need for cognitive closureKeith B Lyle, Michael C Grillo
Memory (Hove, England)|January 3, 2018
Making remembering more memorableMarcus L Leppanen, Keith B Lyle
Laterality|April 17, 2013
Consistent-handed individuals are more authoritarianKeith B Lyle, Michael C Grillo
Brain and Cognition|May 11, 2010
Bilateral saccades increase intrahemispheric processing but not interhemispheric interaction: Implications for saccade-induced retrieval enhancementKeith B Lyle, Jessica M Martin
Memory (Hove, England)|September 17, 2011
Inconsistent handedness and saccade execution benefit face memory without affecting interhemispheric interactionKeith B Lyle, Alyssa E Orsborn
Pageof 4