Research Topics
| C J MarsolekSummaryAffiliation: University of Minnesota Country: USA Publications
Research Grants
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Detail Information
Publications
Identifying objects impairs knowledge of other objects: a relearning explanation for the neural repetition effectChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Neuroimage 49:1919-32. 2010....
Abstractionist versus exemplar-based theories of visual word priming: a subsystems resolutionChad Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Q J Exp Psychol A 57:1233-59. 2004..Instead, they suggest a resolution to these differing perspectives: Relatively independent neural subsystems operate in parallel to underlie abstract-category and specific-exemplar priming of word forms...
Interactive visual and postvisual processes and their roles in form-specific memoryChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA
Can J Exp Psychol 59:109-23. 2005..Depth of encoding may influence form-specific memory through interactive processing of visual and postvisual information...
Visual antipriming: evidence for ongoing adjustments of superimposed visual object representationsChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci 6:163-74. 2006..Putative purposes of priming and comparisons with other theories are discussed. Priming and antipriming may reflect ongoing adjustments of superimposed representations in neocortex...
Hemispheric asymmetries in visual word-form processing: progress, conflict, and evaluating theoriesChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Brain Lang 103:304-7; author reply 308-12. 2007..This work may provide a good example why a multi-level, multi-method, and multi-paradigm approach holds the greatest promise for rapid theoretical progress...
Interhemispheric communication of abstract and specific visual-form informationChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis 55455, USA
Neuropsychologia 40:1983-99. 2002..Most important, the results support the theory that a specific-exemplar subsystem is more detrimentally affected by interhemispheric transfer of information than an abstract category subsystem...
What antipriming reveals about primingChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Trends Cogn Sci 12:176-81. 2008..Recent evidence demonstrates priming and antipriming within visual object identification systems. These findings might reflect a form of maintenance relearning of superimposed knowledge representations...
Perceptual-motor sequence learning of general regularities and specific sequencesC J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 25:815-36. 1999....
Dissociable neural subsystems underlie visual working memory for abstract categories and specific exemplarsChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci 8:17-24. 2008..For the first time, results from experiments using visual working memory tasks support the dissociable subsystems theory...
Initial storage of unfamiliar objects: examining memory stores with signal detection analysesChad J Marsolek
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455, United States
Acta Psychol (Amst) 119:81-106. 2005..Results support a conciliatory resolution to the debate concerning memory in this task and help to clarify properties of memory stores underlying the initial storage of unfamiliar objects...
Viewpoint-invariant and viewpoint-dependent object recognition in dissociable neural subsystemsE D Burgund
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA
Psychon Bull Rev 7:480-9. 2000....
Form-specific visual priming for new associations in the right cerebral hemisphereC J Marsolek
University of Arizona, Tucson, USA
Mem Cognit 24:539-56. 1996....
A critical boundary to the left-hemisphere advantage in visual-word processingRebecca G Deason
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Brain Lang 92:251-61. 2005..Results support the theory that dissociable abstract and specific neural subsystems underlie visual-form recognition and fail to support the theory that a visual lexicon operates in the left hemisphere...
Sensitivity reductions in false recognition: a measure of false memories with stronger theoretical implicationsCarmen E Westerberg
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, MN, USA
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 29:747-59. 2003..Extant models that predict reduced critical-word sensitivity also predict lower sensitivity for related words than for unrelated words. These results provide crucial new constraints on theoretical explanations of false memories...
Evidence for dissociable neural mechanisms underlying inference generation in familiar and less-familiar scenariosBrian A Sundermeier
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Brain Lang 95:402-13. 2005..Thus, inferences may be generated in different ways depending on which of two dissociable neural subsystems underlies the activation of background information...
Hemispheric asymmetries in memory processes as measured in a false recognition paradigmCarmen E Westerberg
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA
Cortex 39:627-42. 2003..A potential resolution to the seemingly contradictory theories of asymmetries in memory processing is briefly discussed...
Letter-case-specific priming in the right cerebral hemisphere with a form-specific perceptual identification taskE D Burgund
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
Brain Cogn 35:239-58. 1997....
Does a causal relation exist between the functional hemispheric asymmetries of visual processing subsystems?David R Andresen
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Jordan Hall, 420 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Brain Cogn 59:135-44. 2005..Asymmetries in shape processing and spatial-relations encoding may not be due to a common causal force influencing multiple subsystems...
The role of causal discourse structure in narrative writingP van den Broek
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA
Mem Cognit 28:711-21. 2000..g., Grice, 1975)...
What form of memory underlies novelty preferences?KELLY A SNYDER
Department of Psychology, University of Denver, Denver, Colorado 80208, USA
Psychon Bull Rev 15:315-21. 2008....
Serotonin levels influence patterns of repetition primingE Darcy Burgund
Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
Neuropsychology 17:161-70. 2003..The authors conclude that serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) plays a critical role in repetition priming by helping to modulate which neural systems contribute to priming effects...
Research Grants
- Emotion and MemoryChad Marsolek; Fiscal Year: 2004..It also should help to provide new ways to conceptualize debilitating memories in post-traumatic stress disorder (and some phobias) and to suggest new treatments for such afflictions. ..
