I am a senior at the University of Dayton. My majors are Pre-Dentistry and Psychology. I am interested in child and abnormal psychology. I am working on editing articles as a project for my History of Psychology class. Hi, This is Dr. D. I have reviewed, briefly, the interesting articles you have posted to your queue and recommend Chunking or Preadolescence of those you selected for the following reasons: Cognitive bias: rather narrow; rather well developed; may not find enough literature that you need Chunking (psychology): excellent! Needs much historical addition! Diffusion of responsibility: needs development for sure, but fairly recent and not sure that you will find enough of historical information Eyewitness testimony: too recent; little room for historical development Preadolescence: I am a little wary about this article. Although it refers to Freud, he really didn’t address this in the way the article states. So, from that perspective you could improve it. However, you will be limited from an historical perspective. Dual-coding theory—I love this topic, but its history doesn’t go back that far. On that basis, I would advise against, unless you are really excited about it. Let me know if you have any questions! WebFlower1 (talk) 00:25, 2 March 2012 (UTC)
Chiarotti, F., Cutuli, D., Foti, F., Mandolesi, L., Menghini, D., Petrosini, L., & Vicari, S. (2011). Explorative function in Williams syndrome analyzed through a large-scale task with multiple rewards. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 32, 972-985.
Cohen, A., & Glicksohn, A. (2011). The role of Gestalt grouping principles in visual statistical learning. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 73, 708-713.
Reed, S. K. (2010). Cognition: Theories and application (8th ed.). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.