2010

Goberman, A. M., Miller, N. S., McAuley, J.D., Dilley, L.C., & Scherer, R. (March, 2010). Comparison of speech and non-speech motor timing in parkinson disease. Poster presented at the 15th Biennial Conference on Motor Speech: Motor Speech Disorders and Speech Motor Control, Savannah, GA.

Henry, M.J. & McAuley, J.D. (July, 2010). Interactions between pitch and time processing: Application of special relativity theory to auditory perception. Paper presented at the 16th Cognitive Science Association for Interdisciplinary Learning Conference, Hood River, OR.

Wedd, A. W., Henry, M.J., & McAuley, J.D. (July, 2010). Regulatory fit and auditory category learning. Paper presented at the 16th Cognitive Science Association for Interdisciplinary Learning Conference, Hood River, OR.

Miller, J., Carlson, L., & McAuley, J.D. (November, 2010). Entraining attention across auditory and visual modalities. Poster presented at the 18th Annual Object Perception, Attention and Memory Meeting, St. Louis, MO.

Wedd, A., Henry, M.J. & McAuley, J.D. (November, 2010). Attention, predictability and the auditory ‘oddball’ effect in perceived duration. Poster presented at the 9th Auditory Perception, Cognition, and Action Meeting, St. Louis, MO.

McAuley, J.D., Henry, M.J., Wedd, A.W., Tuft, S., & Grushcow, B.T. (2010). Regulatory focus theory and auditory perceptual classification: A motivation perspective on musician advantages in listening tests. Abstracts of the Psychonomic Society: 51st Annual Meeting, p. 38.

Henry, M.J., Tkach, J., & McAuley J.D. (2010). Tempo modulates beat perception and involvement of motor areas in timing. Abstracts of the Psychonomic Society: 51st Annual Meeting, p. 117.

Henry, M.J., McAuley, J.D., Hartman, W.H., & Pleskac, T.J. (2010). Avoiding measurement artifacts in the detection of ‘expected’ and ‘unexpected’ signals. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 128 (4), 2455.

Myers, C.E., VanMeenen, K.M., McAuley, J.D., Beck, K.D., Pang, K.C.H., & Servatius, R.J. (2010). Faster acquisition of eyeblink conditioning under omission contingencies by veterans with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Presented at Society for Neuroscience, Washington, DC.