Conscious access to suppressed threatening information is modulated by working memory
Dong Liu, Li Wang, Ying Wang, Yi Jiang
págs. 1419-1427
Ajay B. Satpute, Erik C. Nook, Sandhya Narayanan, Jocelyn Shu, Jochen Weber, Kevin N. Ochsner
págs. 1428-1442
The long reach of nurturing family environments: Links with midlife emotion-regulatory styles and late-life security in intimate relationships
Robert J. Waldinger, Marc S. Schulz
págs. 1443-1450
Your understanding is my understanding: Evidence for a community of knowledge
Steven A. Sloman, Nathaniel Rabb
págs. 1451-1460
From caregivers to peers: Puberty shapes human face perception
Giorgia Picci, K. Suzanne Scherf
págs. 1461-1473
Impaired velocity processing reveals an agnosia for motion in depth
Martijn Barendregt, Serge O. Dumoulin, Bas Rokers
págs. 1474-1485
Creating body shapes from verbal descriptions by linking similarity spaces
Matthew Q. Hill, Stephan Streuber, Carina A. Hahn, Michael J. Black, Alice O'Toole
págs. 1486-1497
When the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak: Developmental differences in judgments about inner moral conflict
Christina Starmans, Paul Bloom
págs. 1498-1506
A tale of two types of perspective taking: Sex differences in spatial ability
Margaret R. Tarampi, Nahal Heydari, Mary Hegarty
págs. 1507-1516
Social class and the motivational relevance of other human beings: Evidence from visual attention
Pia Dietze, Eric D. Knowles
págs. 1517-1527
On social feedback loops and cascading effects in autism: A commentary on warlaumont, richards, gilkerson, and oiler (2014)
Nameera Akhtar, Vikram K. Jaswal, Janette Dinishak, Christine Stephen
págs. 1528-1530
The social feedback hypothesis and communicative development in autism spectrum disorder: A response to Akhtar, Jaswal, Dinishak, and Stephan (2016)
Anne S. Warlaumont, Jeffrey A. Richards, Jill Gilkerson, Daniel S. Messinger, D. Kimbrough Oiler
págs. 1531-1533