Neil W. Mulligan

Affiliations: 
Psychology University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 
Area:
Cognitive Psychology
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Publications

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Saraulli D, Mulligan NW, Saraulli S, et al. (2023) Exploring the roles of distinctiveness and performance anticipation in the Attentional Boost Effect. Memory (Hove, England). 1-13
Mulligan NW, Spataro P, West JT. (2023) Memory and attention: A double dissociation between memory encoding and memory retrieval. Cognition. 238: 105509
Mulligan NW, Buchin ZL, Powers A. (2023) Transitive inference and the testing effect: Retrieval practice impairs transitive inference. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2006). 17470218231156732
Spataro P, Mulligan NW, Saraulli D, et al. (2022) The attentional boost effect facilitates the encoding of contextual details: New evidence with verbal materials and a modified recognition task. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics. 84: 1489-1500
Mulligan NW, Susser JA, Horschler DJ. (2022) Action memory and metamemory. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Mulligan NW, Buchin ZL, West JT. (2021) Attention, the testing effect, and retrieval-induced forgetting: Distraction dissociates the positive and negative effects of retrieval on subsequent memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Besken M, Mulligan NW. (2021) The bizarreness effect and visual imagery: No impact of concurrent visuo-spatial distractor tasks indicates little role for visual imagery. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Smith SA, Mulligan NW. (2021) Immersion, presence, and episodic memory in virtual reality environments. Memory (Hove, England). 1-23
Su N, Buchin ZL, Mulligan NW. (2021) Levels of retrieval and the testing effect. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 47: 652-670
Spataro P, Mulligan NW, Cestari V, et al. (2021) The attentional boost effect enhances the item-specific, but not the relational, encoding of verbal material: Evidence from multiple recall tests with related and unrelated lists. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
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