Illusions
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Subject Areas on Research
- "False" hope.
- A halo visual illusion.
- A self-agency bias in preschoolers\textquotesingle causal inferences.
- A simple design for an impossible triangle.
- Ageing and the Moses illusion: older adults fall for Moses but if asked directly, stick with Noah.
- Aging and the memorial consequences of catching contradictions with prior knowledge.
- All great ape species (Gorilla gorilla, Pan paniscus, Pan troglodytes, Pongo abelii) and two-and-a-half-year-old children (Homo sapiens) discriminate appearance from reality.
- An initial accuracy focus prevents illusory truth.
- Assimilation of virtual legs and perception of floor texture by complete paraplegic patients receiving artificial tactile feedback.
- Competing cues: Older adults rely on knowledge in the face of fluency.
- Creating illusions of past encounter through brief exposure.
- Differing views: Can chimpanzees do Level 2 perspective-taking?
- Disability and sunshine: can hedonic predictions be improved by drawing attention to focusing illusions or emotional adaptation?
- Evoking false beliefs about autobiographical experience.
- Expanding the primate body schema in sensorimotor cortex by virtual touches of an avatar.
- Expertise effects in the Moses illusion: detecting contradictions with stored knowledge.
- Hemisphere-specific properties of the ventriloquism aftereffect.
- Knowledge does not protect against illusory truth.
- Memory and the Moses illusion: failures to detect contradictions with stored knowledge yield negative memorial consequences.
- On Known Unknowns: Fluency and the Neural Mechanisms of Illusory Truth.
- Saltation through the blind spot.
- Slowing presentation speed increases illusions of knowledge.
- Susac syndrome with transient inverted vision.
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation differentially affects speed and direction judgments.
- Trusting our memories: dissociating the neural correlates of confidence in veridical versus illusory memories.
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Keywords of People
- Marsh, Elizabeth J., Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Psychology & Neuroscience