Research Publications

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Jones, L.A., & Wearden, J.H. (2003). More is not necessarily better: Examining the nature of the temporal reference memory component in timing. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 56, 321-343.

Jones, L.A., & Wearden, J.H. (2004). Double standards: Memory loading in temporal reference memory. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 57B, 55-77.

Wearden, J.H., Todd, N.P., & Jones, L.A. (2006). When do auditory-visual differences in duration judgments occur? Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 59, 1709-1724

Wearden, J.H., & Jones, L.A. (2007). Is the growth of subjective time in humans a linear or non-linear function of real time? Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 60, 1289-1302.

Ogden, R.S., Wearden, J.H. & Jones, L.A. (2008). The remembrance of times past: Interference in temporal reference memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 34, 1524-1544.

Ogden, R.S., Wearden, J.H. & Jones, L.A. (submitted). Are memories for duration modality specific? Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.

Jones, L.A.. & Wearden, J.H. (submitted). Click trains and the rate of information processing: Does “speeding up” subjective time make other psychological processes run faster? Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.

Ogden, R.S. & Jones, L.A. (in press). More is still not better: Testing the perturbation model of temporal reference memory across different modalities and tasks. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.

Jones, L.A., Wells, J., & Poliakoff, E. (submitted). Good vibrations: Human timing in the vibrotactile modality. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology


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