Lanthier, S.N., Zhu, M.J.H., Byrun, C.S.J., Jarick, M., & Kingstone, A. (2021). The costs and benefits to memory when observing and experiencing live eye contact. Visual Cognition, 29, 1-15.
Jarick, M. & Bencic, R. (2019). Eye contact is a two-way street: arousal is elicited by the sending and receiving of eye gaze information. Frontiers in Psychology: Perception Science, 10, 1262.
Lanthier, S.N., Jarick, M., Zhu, M.J.H., Byun, C.S.J., & Kingstone, A. (2019). Socially communicative eye contact and gender affect memory. Frontiers in Psychology: Perception Science, 10, 1128.
Jarick, M., Laidlaw, K., Nasiopoulos, E., and Kingstone, A. (2016). Eye contact affects attention more than arousal as revealed by prospective time estimation. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics.
Jarick, M. & Kingstone, A. (2015). The duality of gaze: eyes extract and signal social information during sustained cooperative and competitive dyadic gaze. Frontiers in Psychology: Cognition.
Jarick, M., Stewart, M.T., Dixon, M.J., & Smilek, D. (2013). Do you see what I hear? Vantage point preference and visual dominance in a time-space synaesthete. Frontiers in Cognitive Science, 16, 695.
Jarick, M., Jensen, C., Dixon, M.J., & Smilek, D. (2011). The automaticity of vantage point shifts within a synaesthetes’ mental calendar. Journal of Neuropsychology, 5, 333-352.
Jarick, M., Dixon, M.J., & Smilek, D. (2011). 9 is always on top: Assessing the automaticity of synaesthetic number-forms. Brain and Cognition, 77, 96-105.
Jarick, M., Dixon, M.J., Maxwell, E.C., Nicholls, M., & Smilek, D. (2009). The ups, and downs (and lefts and rights) of synaesthetic number forms: Validation from spatial cueing and SNARC-type tasks. Cortex, 45, 1190-1199.
Jarick, M., Dixon, M.J., Stewart, M.T., Maxwell, E.C., & Smilek, D. (2009). A different outlook on time: Visual and auditory month names elicit different mental vantage points for a time-space synaesthete. Cortex, 45, 1217-1228.
Graydon, C., Dixon, M.J., Harrigan, K., Fugelsang, J.A., & Jarick, M. (2017). Losses disguised as wins in multiline slots: using an educational animation to reduce erroneous win overestimates. International Gambling Studies, 17, 442-458.
Jensen, C., Dixon, M.J., Harrigan, K.A., Sheepy, E., Fugelsang, J.A., & Jarick, M. (2013). Misinterpreting "winning" in multiline slot machine games. International Gambling Studies, 13, 112-126.
Dixon, M.J., MacLaren, V.V., Jarick, M., Fugelsang, J.A., & Harrigan, K.A. (2012). The frustrating effects of just missing the jackpot: Slot machine near-misses trigger large skin conductance responses, but no post reinforcement pauses. Journal of Gambling Studies, 29, 661-674.
Dixon, M.J., Harrigan, K.A., Jarick, M., Fugelsang, J.A., & Sheepy, E. (2011). Psychophysiological arousal signatures of near-misses in slot machine play. International Gambling Studies, 11, 393-407.