Psychonomic Bulletin and Review

Approach and avoidance movements are unaffected by cognitive conflict: A comparison of the Simon effect and stimulus–response compatibility
Are multiple visual short-term memory storages necessary to explain the retro-cue effect?
Audience design affects acoustic reduction via production facilitation
Evidence for mental subdivision of space by infants: 3- to 4-month-olds spontaneously bisect a small-scale area into left and right categories
Focal spatial attention can eliminate inhibition of return
Geometric orientation by humans: angles weigh in
In and out of consciousness: Sustained electrophysiological activity reflects individual differences in perceptual awareness
Incidental retrieval-induced forgetting of location information
Informational affordances: evidence of acquired perception–action sequences for information extraction
Loving-kindness brings loving-kindness: The impact of Buddhism on cognitive self–other integration
Reaching for words and nonwords: Interactive effects of word frequency and stimulus quality on the characteristics of reaching movements
Reasoning with base rates is routine, relatively effortless, and context dependent
Risk is relative: Risk aversion yields cooperation rather than defection in cooperation-friendly environments
Standard errors and confidence intervals in within-subjects designs: Generalizing Loftus and Masson (1994) and avoiding the biases of alternative accounts
Suggestion does not de-automatize word reading: Evidence from the semantically based Stroop task
Tests enhance retention and transfer of spatial learning
The QWERTY Effect: How typing shapes the meanings of words.
The structure of short-term memory scanning: an investigation using response time distribution models
Too dog tired to avoid danger: Self-control depletion in canines increases behavioral approach toward an aggressive threat
Using ecphoric confidence ratings to discriminate seen from unseen faces: The effects of retention interval and distinctiveness
Visual processing for action resists similarity of relevant and irrelevant object features
Voluntary and involuntary attention vary as a function of impulsivity
Working memory can enhance unconscious visual perception