Publications
The Handbook of Attention (2015)
The MIT Press
Edited by Jonathan Fawcett, Evan Risko and Alan Kingstone
Cognition (2016)
Oxford Press.
Sinnett, S., Smilek, D. & Kingstone, A.
Alan Kingstone, PhD
Professor | Distinguished Scholar | Fellow Royal Society of Canada
Past administration positions
2014 - 2020 UBC Social Sciences & Humanities Research Advisor to the VPRI
2011 - 2014 Head of the Department of Psychology
Recent honours
2022-23 Royal Society Wolfson Visiting Fellow, University of Bristol, England
2020 Donald O. Hebb Distinguished Contribution Award, Canadian Society for Brain, Behaviour & Cognitive Science
2017 Distinguished Fellow, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
2017 Fellow, Canadian Society for Brain, Behaviour & Cognitive Science
2016 Hood Fellow, University of Auckland, NZ
Textbooks
Sinnett, S., Smilek, D. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Cognition. Oxford Press.
Smilek, D., Sinnett, S., & Kingstone, A. (2013). Cognition. Oxford Press.
Benjafield, J.G., Smilek, D. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Cognition. Oxford Press.
Books (Edited)
Fawcett, J. M., Risko, E. F., & Kingstone, A. (2015). The Handbook of Attention. The MIT Press
Gibson, B. S., Folk, C. L., Theeuwes, J. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Attentional capture. Psychology Press.
Cabeza, R. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Handbook on functional neuroimaging of cognition. MIT Press.
Cabeza, R. & Kingstone, A. (2001) Handbook on functional neuroimaging of cognition. MIT Press.
Journals Edited (Recent)
Kingstone, A. & Miller, MB (2007- present). The Year in Cognitive Neuroscience. Annals of the NY Academy of Sciences.
Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2017, Guest Eds.). Everyday Attention. Special Issue of the Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology.
Papers / Chapters*
If you cannot access any of the below, please just email Alan Kingstone at: alan.kingstone@ubc.ca
In press / 2024
Bischof, W. F., Anderson, N. C., & Kingstone, A. (2024). A tutorial: Analysing eye and head movements in virtual reality. Behavior Research Methods, doi.org/10.3758/s13428-024-02482-5. Open access (Read only). Accepted manuscript (Download).
Capozzi, F., & Kingstone, A. (2024). The effects of visual attention on social behavior. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 18 (1). e12910.
Edwards, S., Jenkins, R., Jacobs, O. & Kingstone, A. (2024). The medium modulates the Medusa effect: Perceived mind in analogue and digital images. Cognition.
Forby^, L., Pazhoohi^, F., & Kingstone, A. (2024). Autistic traits and anthropomorphism: The case of vehicle fascia perception. Cognitive Processing.
Forys, B. J., Winstanley, C. A., Kingstone, A., & Todd, R. (2024). Short-term memory capacity predicts willingness to expend cognitive effort for reward. eNeuro.
Jacobs, O. L. E., Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (In press). Large language models have divergent effects on self-perceptions of mind and the attributes considered uniquely human. Consciousness & Cognition, 124, 103733.
Kingstone, A., Walker, E., Amin, S., & Bischof, W. F. (2024). Eyes meet, hands greet: The art of timing in social interactions. Perception. 53 (4). 287-290.
Pazhoohi, F., Aoki, K. & Kingstone, A. (2024). Incomplete faces do but masked faces do not affect mind perception. Psychological Reports.
Pazhoohi, F., Jacobs, O.,. & Kingstone, A. (2024). Gaze preferences to male contrapposto and non-contrapposto postures Empirical Studies of the Arts.
2023
Beauchamp, Mark & Kingstone, A & Ntoumanis, Nikos. (2023). Psychology of athletic endeavor. Annual Review of Psychology, 74, 597 - 624. 10.1146/annurev-psych-012722-045214.
Bischof, W. F., Anderson, N. C., & Kingstone, A. (2023). Eye and head movements while encoding and recognizing panoramic scenes in virtual reality. PLoS One, 18, 1-21 10.1371/journal.pone.0282030.
Brown, N. B., Milani, S., Jabs, F., Kingstone, A. & Brotto, L. A. (2023). Exploring women’s state-level anxiety in response to virtual reality erotica. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, DOI: 10.1080/0092623X.2023.2265924
Draschkow, D., Anderson, N.C., David, E., Gauge, N., Kingstone, A., Kumle, L., Laurent, X., Nobre, A. C., Shiels, S., & Võ, M. L.-H. (2023). Using XR (extended reality) for behavioral, clinical, and learning sciences requires updates in infrastructure and funding. Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 10(2), 317-323. https://doi.org/10.1177/23727322231196305
Forby, L., Anderson, N. C., Cheng, J. T., Foulsham, T., Karstadt, B., Dawson, J., Pazhoohi, F., & Kingstone, A. (2023). Reading the room: Autistic traits, gaze behaviour, and the ability to infer social relationships. PLoS One, 18, 1-18
Jacobs, O. L. E., Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2023). Contrapposto posture captures visual attention: an online gaze tracking experiment. Visual Cognition, 31, 160-167, DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2023.2213904
Jacobs, O. L. E., Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2023). Self-discrepancies in mind perception for actual, ideal, and ought selves and partners. PLoS One, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0295515
Holmqvist, K. et al. (2023). Eye tracking: empirical foundations for a minimal reporting guideline. Behavior Research Methods, 55, 364-416. doi.org/10.3758/s13428-021-01762-8
Pazhoohi, F., Arantes, J., Kingstone, A., & Pinal, D. (2023). Neural correlates and perceived attractiveness of male and female shoulder-to-hip ratio in men and women: An EEG study. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 52, 2123–2141. doi.org/10.1007/s10508-023-02610-w
Pazhoohi, F., Garza, R. & Kingstone, A. (2023). The interacting effects of height and shoulder-to-hip ratio on perceptions of attractiveness, masculinity, and fighting ability: Experimental design and ecological validity considerations. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 52, 301-314 10.1007/s10508-022-02416-2
Pazhoohi, F., Garza, R. & Kingstone, A. (2023). Lordosis posture (arching the back) indicates sexual receptivity in women. Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, 9, 125–140. doi.org/10.1007/s40750-023-00212-3
Pazhoohi, F., Gojamgunde, S. & Kingstone, A. (2023). Give me space: Sex, attractiveness, and mind perception as potential contributors to different comfort distances for humans and robots. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 90. doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102088
Pazhoohi, F., Hassan, S. B. & Kingstone, A. (2023). The interacting effects of men’s height and shoulder-to-hip ratio on comfort distance: A Virtual reality study. Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, 9, 172–181. doi.org/10.1007/s40750-023-00216-z
Pazhoohi, F., Kingstone, A. (2023). Eyelash length attractiveness across ethnicities. Scientific Reports, 13, 14849 (2023). doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-41739-5
Wahn, B., König, P., & Kingstone, A. (2023). Predicting group benefits in joint multiple object tracking. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 85, 1962–1975. doi.org/10.3758/s13414-023-02693-6
2022
Dudarev, V., Liu, M. & Kingstone (2022). De-evolving human eyes: The effect of eye camouflage on human attention. Cognition, 225, 1 - 5. 105136
Gerlofs, J. D., Roberts, K. H., Anderson, N. C., & Kingstone, A. (2022). Eye spy: Gaze communication and deception during hide-and-seek. Cognition, 227, 1 - 12. 105209.
Jacobs, O., Gazzaz, K., & Kingstone, A. (2022). Mind the robot! Variation in attributions of mind to a wide set of real and fictional robots. International Journal of Social Robotics, 14, 529-537. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12369-021-00807-4
Milani, S., Jabs, F., Brown, N. B., Kingstone, A., & Brotto, L. (2022). Virtual reality erotica: Exploring general presence, sexual presence, sexual arousal, and sexual desire in women. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 51, 565–576.
Pazhoohi, F., Bischof, W. F., & Kingstone, A. (2022). A life history approach to artistic endeavors and production: The case of metal music. Evolutionary Psychological Science, 8, 189-195.
Pazhoohi, F., Capozzi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2022). Physical disabilities in romantic partners: Behavioral immune system theory fails to explain why women and men differ in their perceptions of potential romantic partners who are physically disabled. Personality and Individual Differences, 198, 1 - 4.
Pazhoohi, F., Garza, R. & Kingstone, A. (2022). Sexual receptivity signal of lordosis posture and intra-sexual competition in women. Sexes, 3, 59-67. 10.3390/sexes3010005
Pazhoohi, F., Jacobs, O. & Kingstone, A. (2022). Contrapposto pose influences perceptions of attractiveness, masculinity, and dynamicity of male statues from antiquity. Evolutionary Psychological Science, 8, 46–55. doi: 10.1007/s40806-021-00310-z
Pazhoohi, F., & Kingstone, A. (2022). The effect of eyelash length on attractiveness: A previously uninvestigated indicator of beauty. Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences, 16, 176 - 180. https://doi.org/10.1037/ebs0000243
Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2022). Larger vehicles are perceived as more aggressive, angry, dominant, and masculine. Current Psychology, 41, 4195-4199. doi.org/10.1007/s12144-020-00936-5
Pazhoohi, F., & Kingstone, A. (2022). Unattractive faces are more attractive when the bottom-half is masked, an effect that reverses when the top-half is concealed. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 7. doi: 10.1186/s41235-022-00359-9
Pazhoohi, F., & Kingstone, A. (2022). Preferred distance from camera for online interactions and its relation with individual differences in pathogen sensitivity. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 84, 101916.
Wahn, B., Schmitz, L., Kingstone, A. & Böckler-Raettig, A. (2022). When eyes beat lips: Speaker gaze affects audiovisual integration in the McGurk illusion. Psychological Research, 86, 1930 - 1943. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-021-01618-y
2021
Bradshaw, J., Brown, N., Kingstone, A., & Brotto, L. (2021). Asexuality vs. sexual interest/arousal disorder: Examining group differences in initial attention to sexual stimuli. PloS One, 16(12), e0261434. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0261434
Brown, N.B., Peragine, D., Kingstone, A., Vanderlaan, D., & Brotto, L.A. (2021). Cognitive processing of sexual cues in asexual individuals and women with desire/arousal difficulties. PloS One, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251074
Capozzi, F., Wahn, B., Ristic, J., & Kingstone, A. (2021). Prior attentional bias is modulated by social gaze. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 83, 1-6.
Dawson, J., Kingstone, A., & Foulsham, T. (2021). Theory of mind affects the interpretation of another person's focus of attention. Scientific Reports, 11, 17147.
Dosso, J., Anderson, N. C., Wahn, B., Choi, G. S. J., Kingstone, A. (2021). Social modulation of on-screen looking behaviour. Vision Research, 182, 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2020.12.009
Flindall, J. W., Sara, A. & Kingstone, A. (2021). Head and eye movements are each facilitated by the offset of a central fixation point in a virtual gap paradigm. Experimental Brain Research, 249, 1117 - 126. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-020-05905-9.
Karlinsky, A., Howe, H., deJonge, M., Kingstone, A., Sabiston, C., & Welsh, T. W. (2021). Body image and voluntary gaze behaviors towards physique-salient images. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18, 2549. doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052549
Lanthier, S. N., Zhu, M. J. H., Byun, C. S. J., Jarick, M., & Kingstone, A. (2021). The costs and benefits to memory when observing and experiencing live eye contact. Visual Cognition, 30, 70 - 84. doi: 10.1080/13506285.2021.1926381
Palmer-Hague, J.L., Wong, S.T., Wassersug, R.J., Kingstone, A., & Wibowo, E. (2021). Hormones and visual attention to sexual stimuli in older men: an exploratory investigation. The Aging Male, 24, 106 - 118.
Pazhoohi, F., Capozzi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2021). Physical disability affects women's, but not men’s perception of opposite sex attractiveness. Frontiers in Psychology, Evolutionary Psychology, 12, 1 - 8. 788287.
Pazhoohi, F., Choi, G., & Kingstone, A. (2021). Larger distances from larger vehicles: Effect of vehicle size, Vvewing side, and their facia on comfort distance in virtual reality. Australian Journal of Psychology, 73:2, 179-187, DOI: 10.1080/00049530.2021.1882272
Pazhoohi, F., Forby, L., & Kingstone, A. (2021). Facial masks affect emotion recognition in the general population and individuals with autistic traits. PLOS ONE, 16, 1 - 23. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0257740
Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2021). The effect of movie frame rate on viewer preference: An eye tracking study. Augmented Human Research, 6, 2
Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2021). Associations of political orientation, xenophobia, right-wing quthoritarianism, and concern of Covid-19: Cognitive responses to an actual pathogen threat. Personality and Individual Differences, 182, 1 - 3. 111081.
Pazhoohi, F. Pazhouhi, S., & Kingstone, A. (2021). Concern about contracting COVID-19 predicts men’s preference for female facial femininity, but not women’s preference for male facial masculinity. Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, 7, 17-21.
Seernani, DP., et al. (2021). Visual search in ADHD, ASD and ASD+ADHD: Overlapping or dissociating disorders? European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 20, 549 - 562. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-020-01535-2
Wahn, B. & Kingstone, A. (2021). Humans share task load with a computer partner if (they believe that) it acts human-like. Acta Psychologica, 212, 1 - 6. 103205
Wahn, B., König, P., & Kingstone, A. (2021). Interpersonal coordination in joint multiple object tracking. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 47, 1166–1181. https://doi.org/10.1037/xhp0000935
Wahn, B., Ruuskanen, V., Kingstone, A., and Mathôt, S. (2021). Coordination effort in joint action is reflected in pupil size. Acta Psychologica, 215, 1 - 8. 103291.
Will, P., Merritt, E., Jenkins, R., & Kingstone, A. (2021). The Medusa effect reveals levels of mind perception in pictures. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2106640118
2020
Anderson, N. C., Bischof, W. F., Foulsham, T., & Kingstone, A. (2020). Turning the (virtual) world around: Patterns in saccade direction vary with picture orientation and shape in virtual reality. Journal of Vision, 20 (8) 21, 1-19.
Bianchi, L.J., Kingstone, A. & Risko, E.F. (2020). The role of cognitive load in modulating social looking: a mobile eye tracking study. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 5, 44.
Bischof, W. F., Anderson, N. C., Doswell, M., & Kingstone, A. (2020). Visual exploration of omni-directional panoramic scenes. Journal of Vision, 20 (7), 23, 1-29.
Dosso, J., Chua, R., Weeks, D.J., Turk, D.J. & Kingstone, A. (2020). Attention and awareness: Representation of visuomotor space in split-brain patients. Cortex, 122, 253-262.
Dosso, J. A., Chow, K. N. T., Kim, J. J., Wong, N. T. W., & Kingstone, A. (2020). Similar social presence effects when reaching for real and digital objects. PLOS ONE, 15(5):e0232409.
Dosso, J., Huynh, M., & Kingstone, A. (2020). I spy without my eye: Covert attention in human social interactions. Cognition, 202, 104388 [OSF link]
Flindall, J. W., Sinnet, S. & Kingstone, A. (2020). The Quiet Eye and expertise: Sustained fixations do not transfer to unpractised throws among expert dart players. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 42, 269-279. https://doi.org/10.1123/jsep.2019-0217
Kendall, L. N., Raffaelli, Q., Todd, R. M., Kingstone, A., & Cohn, N. (2020)*. Show me how you feel: Iconicity and systematicity in visual morphology (214-229). In Pamela Perniss, Olga Fischer and Christina Ljungberg Operationalizing Iconicity (Iconicity in Language and Literature series). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Kingstone, A. (2020). Everyday cognition and human behaviour. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 74, 267-274. doi.org/10.1037/cep0000244
Kramer, R. S. S., Mulgrew, J., Anderson, N. C., Vasilyev, D., Kingstone, A., Reynolds, M. G., & Ward, R. (2020). Physically attractive faces attract us physically. Cognition, 198, 104193
Pazhoohi, F., Arantes, J., Kingstone, A., & Fernandez, D. P. (2020). Waist to hip ratio and breast size modulate the processing of female body silhouettes: an EEG study. Evolution & Human Behavior, 41, 150-169.
Pazhoohi, F., Arantes, J., Kingstone, A., & Pinal, D. (2020). Becoming sexy: Contrapposto pose increases attractiveness ratings and modulates observers’ brain activity. Biological Psychology, 151, 107842.
Pazhoohi, F., Garza R. & Kingstone, A. (2020). Effects of breast size, intermammary cleft distance (cleavage) and ptosis on perceived attractiveness, health, fertility and age: Do life history, self-perceived mate value and sexism attitude play a role? Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, 6(1), 75–92.
Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2020). Parasite prevalence and income inequality positively predict beardedness across 25 countries. Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, 6(2), 185–193.
Pazhoohi, F. & Kingstone, A. (2020). Sex differences on the importance of veiling: A cross-cultural investigation. Cross-cultural Research, 54, 486-501.
Turner, B. O., Kingstone, A., Risko, E. F., Santander, T., Li, J., & Miller, M. B. (2020). Recording brain activity can function as an implied social presence and alter neural connectivity. Cognitive Neuroscience, 11, 16-23.
Wahn, B., Czeszumski, A., Labusch, M., Kingstone, A., & König, P. (2020). Dyadic and triadic search: Benefits, costs, and predictors of group performance. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 82, 2415–2433.
Wahn, B., Dosso, J. & Kingstone, A. (2020). Audiovisual integration during joint action: No effects for motion discrimination and temporal order judgment tasks. Frontiers in Psychology.
Wahn, B. & Kingstone, A. (2020). Labour division in joint tasks: Humans maximize use of their individual attentional capacities. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 82, 3085–3095
Wahn, B., Rohe, T., Gearhart, A., Kingstone, A., and Sinnett, S. (2020) Performing a task jointly enhances the sound-induced flash illusion. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 73, 2260-2271.
Will, P., Rothwell, A., Chisholm, J. D., Risko, E. F., Kingstone, A. (2020). Cognitive load but not immersion plays a significant role in embodied cognition as seen through the spontaneous act of leaning. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 73, 2000-2007.
Will P, Bischof WF, Kingstone A (2020) The impact of classroom seating location and computer use on student academic performance. PLoS ONE 15(8): e0236131.
2019
Bischof, W.F., Anderson, N. A. & Kingstone, A. (2019)*. Temporal methods for eye movement analysis (407-448). In Christoph Klein and Ulrich Ettinger (Eds.) Eye movement research: An introduction to its scientific foundations and applications. Springer.
Gallup, A. C., Vasilyev, D., Anderson, N., & Kingstone, A. (2019). Contagious yawning in virtual reality is affected by actual, but not simulated, social presence. Scientific Reports, 9:294 | DOI:10.1038/s41598-018-36570-2
Green, C.S. et al. (2019). Improving methodological standards in behavioral interventions for cognitive enhancement. Journal of Cognitive Enhancement, 3, 2-29.
Hessels, R. S., Holleman, G. A., Kingstone, A., Hooge, I.T.C., Kemner, C. (2019). Gaze allocation in face-to-face communication is affected primarily by task structure and social context, not stimulus-driven factors. Cognition, 184, 28-43.
Kachkovski, G., Vasilyev, D., Kuk, M., Kingstone, A., & Street, C. N. H. (2019). Exploring the effects of violating the 180-degree rule on film viewing preferences. Communication Research, 46, 948-964.10.31219/osf.io/vqn5a
Kingstone, A., Kachkovski, G., Vasilyev, D., Kuk, M. & Welsh, T.N. (2019). Mental attribution is not sufficient or necessary to trigger attentional orienting to gaze. Cognition, 189, 35-40. 10.31219/osf.io/h78zf
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 Psychology, 10.1128. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01128
Milani, S., Brotto, L. A. & Kingstone, A. (2019). "I can see you": The impact of implied social presence on visual attention to erotic and neutral stimuli in men and women. The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality, 28, 105-119.
Solman, G. & Kingstone, A. (2019). Spatial organization to facilitate action. PLoS ONE.14(5):e0216342
Tipples, J., Dodd, M., Grubaugh, J. & Kingstone, A. (2019). Verbal descriptions of cue direction affect object desirability. Frontiers in Psychology, 10.471. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00471
Varao-Sousa, T.L., Mills, C., Kingstone, A. (2019). Where you are, not what you see: The impact of learning environment on mind wandering and material retention. Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Learning Analytics & Knowledge, 9, 421-425. doi: 10.1145/3303772.3303824
2018
Cherkasova, M., Clark, L., Barton, J., Schulzer, M., Shafiee, M., Kingstone, A. Stoessl, J., & Winstanley, C. (2018). Win-concurrent sensory cues can promote riskier choice. Journal of Neuroscience. 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1171-18.201
DiGiacomo, A., Wu, D.W.-L., Lenkic, P.J, Fraser, B., Zhao, J. & Kingstone, A. (2018). Convenience improves composting and recycling rates in high-density residential buildings. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 61, 309-331.
Dosso, J. & Kingstone, A. (2018). Social modulation of object-directed but not image-directed actions. PLoS ONE.13(10): e0205830. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205830
Dosso, J. & Kingstone, A. (2018). The fragility of the near-hand effect. Collabra: Psychology, 4(1), 27. [Collabra Psychology is the official journal of the Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science]
Dosso, J., Roberts, K. H., DiGiacomo, A. & Kingstone, A. (2018). The influence of co-action on a simple attention task: A shift back to the status quo. Frontiers in Psychology, 9. 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00874.
Sinnet, S., Maglinti, C. & Kingstone, A. (2018). Grunting's competitive advantage: Considerations of force and distraction. PLoS ONE, 13(2): e0192939
Street, C.N.H., Bischof, W.F. & Kingstone, A. (2018). Perspective taking and theory of mind in hide and seek. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 80, 21-26.
Varao-Sousa, T. L. & Kingstone, A. (2018). Are mind wandering rates an artifact of the probe-caught method? Using self-caught mind wandering in the classroom to test, and reject, this possibility. Behavior Research Methods, 51, 235-242. 10.3758/s13428-018-1073-0
Varao-Sousa, T. L., Smilek, D. & Kingstone, A. (2018). In the lab and in the wild: How distraction and mind wandering affect attention and memory. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 3:42. doi:10.1186/s41235-018-0137-0
Wahn, B., Kingstone, A., & König, P. (2018). Group benefits in joint perceptual tasks: A review. The Year in Cognitive Neuroscience. Annals of the NY Academy of Sciences, 1426, 166-178.
Wu, D.W.-L., DiGiacomo, A. Lenkic, P.J., Cech, P., Zhao, J. & Kingstone, A. (2018). How does the design of waste disposal signage influence waste disposal behavior? Journal of Environmental Psychology, 58, 77-85.
2017
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Are fixations in static natural scenes a useful predictor of attention in the real world? Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 71, 172-181.
Laidlaw, K. E. W. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Fixations to the eyes aids in facial encoding; covertly attending to the eyes does not. Acta Psychologica, 173, 55-65.
Laidlaw, K.E.W. & Kingstone, A. (2017). If not when, then where? Ignoring temporal information eliminates reflexive but not volitional spatial orienting. Vision, 1(2), 10.3390/vision1020012
Palmer-Hague, J. L., Tsang, V., Skead, C., Wassersug, R. J., Nasiopoulos, E., & Kingstone, A. (2017). Androgen deprivation alters attention to sexually provocative visual stimuli in elderly men. Sexual Medicine, 5, e245 - e254.
Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Everyday attention. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 71, 89-92.
Roberts, K.H., Truong, G., Kingstone, A. & Todd, R.M. (2017). The blur of pleasure: Appetitively appealing stimuli decrease subjective temporal perceptual acuity. Psychological Science, 28, 1563-1582.
Solman, G., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Eye and head movements are complementary in visual selection. Royal Society Open Science, 4 (1). 160569.
Solman, G. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Spatial partitions systematize visual search and enhance target memory. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 79, 449–458.
Solman, G. J. F. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Arranging objects in space: Measuring task-relevant organizational behaviors during goal pursuit. Cognitive Science, 41, 1042–1070, 10.1111/cogs.12391.
Steckler, C.M., Hamlin, J.K., Miller, M.B., King, D. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Moral judgment by the disconnected left and right cerebral hemispheres: A split-brain investigation. Royal Society Open Science. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.170172
Street, C.N.H. & Kingstone, (2017). Aligning Spinoza with Descartes: An informed Cartesian account of the truth bias. British Journal of Psychology, 108, 453-466. doi: 10.1111/bjop.12210
Varao-Sousa, T. L., Solman, G. J. F. & Kingstone, A. (2017). Re-reading after mind wandering. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 71, 203-211
Wahn, B., Keshava, A., Sinnett, S., Kingstone, A., König, P. (2017). Audiovisual integration is affected by performing a task jointly. Cognitive Science Society, 1296 - 1301.
Wahn, B., Kingstone, A., König, P. (2017). Two trackers are better than one: Information about the co-actor's actions and performance scores contribute to the collective benefit in a joint visuospatial task. Frontiers in Psychology. 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00669
2016
Anderson, N. C., Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Motion influences gaze direction discrimination and disambiguates contradictory luminance cues. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 23, 817-823. 10.3758/s13423-015-0971-8
Gallup, A. C., Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Social presence diminishes contagious yawning in the laboratory. Scientific Reports, 6, 25045. 10.1038/srep25045
Jarick, M. Laidlaw, K.E.W., Nasiopoulos, E. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Eye contact affects attention more than arousal as revealed by prospective time estimation. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 78, 1302–1307.
Kendall, L. N., Rafaelli, Q., Kingstone A., & Todd, R. M. (2016). Iconic faces are not real faces: enhanced emotion detection and altered neural processing as faces become more iconic. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 1 (19). DOI:10.1186/s41235-016-0021-8.
Kingstone, A. (2016). Covert orienting in the split brain: Right hemisphere specialization for object-based attention. Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition, 21, 732-744.
Kingstone, A., Laidlaw, K.E.W., Nasiopoulos, E. & Risko, E. F. (2016)*. Cognitive ethology and social attention (pp. 365-382). In Michel Tibayrenc & Francisco J. Ayala (Eds). On Human Nature: Evolution, Diversity, Psychology, Ethics, Politics and Religion. Elsevier B.V.
Kuhn, G., Teszka, R., Tenaw, N. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Don't be fooled! Top-down inhibition of attentional orienting in response to social cues in face-to-face and video context. Cognition, 146, 136-142.
Laidlaw, K.E.W., Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2016)*. Levels of complexity and the duality of gaze: How social attention changes from lab to life (pp. 195-215). In Sukhvinder Obhi & Emily Cross (Eds.) Shared Representations: Sensorimotor Foundations of Social Life. Cambridge University Press.
Laidlaw, K.E.W., Rothwell, A. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Camouflaged attention: Covert attention is critical to social communication in natural settings. Evolution & Human Behavior, 37, 449–455.
Laidlaw, K.E.W, Zhu, M.J. H. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Looking away: Distractor influences on saccadic trajectory and endpoint in prosaccade and antisaccade tasks. Experimental Brain Research, 234, 1637-1648. 10.1007/s00221-016-4551-6
Risko, E. F., Richardson, D. C., Kingstone, A. (2016). Breaking the fourth wall of cognitive science: Real world social attention and the dual function of gaze. Current Directions in Psychological Science. 25, 70-74.
Skead, C., Tsang, V., Palmer-Hague, JL, Wassersug, RJ, Nasiopoulos, E. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Using eye-tracking to quantify the impact of prostate cancer treatments on male libido: A pilot study. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 231. PMID 28151146 DOI: 10.1200/jco.2016.34.3_suppl.231
Street, C. N. H., Bischof, W. F., Vadillo, M. A., & Kingstone, A. (2016). Inferring others’ hidden thoughts: Smart guesses in a low diagnostic world. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 29(5), 539-549. 10.1002/bdm.1904.
Wu, D.W.-L., DiGiacomo, A. Lenkic, P.J., Wong, V.K. & Kingstone, A. (2016). Being in a “green” building elicits “greener” recycling, but not necessarily “better” recycling. PLoS ONE 11(1): e0145737. 10.1371/journal.pone.0145737
2015
Anderson, N. C., Anderson, F., Kingstone, A., Bischof, W. F. (2015). A comparison of scanpath comparison methods. Behavior Research Methods, 47, 1377-1392.
Chisholm, J. D. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Action video game players' visual search advantage extends to biologically relevant stimuli. Acta Psychologica, 159, 93-99.
Chisholm, J. D. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Action video games and improved attentional control: Disentangling selection and response-based processes. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 22, 1430-1436.
Ho, S., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Speaking and listening with the eyes: Gaze signaling during dyadic interactions. PLoS ONE, 10 (8) DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0136905
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, 6 (01423). doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01423
Laidlaw, K.E.W., Badiudeen, T., Zhu, M.J., & Kingstone, A (2015). A fresh look at saccadic trajectories and task irrelevant stimuli: Social relevance matters. Vision Research, 111, 82-90. doi: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1016/j.visres.2015.03.024
Lanthier, S. N., Wu, D.W.-L., Chapman, C. S. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Resolving the controversy of the proportion validity effect (PVE): Volitional attention is not required, but may have an effect. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 77, 2611-2621. 10.3758/s13414-015-0956-8.
Nasiopoulos, E., Risko, E.F., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Wearable computing: Will it make people prosocial? British Journal of Psychology, 106, 209-216. 10.1111/bjop.12080.
Nasiopoulos, E., Risko, E.F. & Kingstone, A. (2015)*. A Social attention, social presence, and the dual function of gaze (pp. 129-155). In Aina Puce & Bennett I. Bertenthal (Eds.) The Many Faces of Social Attention: Behavioral and Neural Measures. Springer International Publishing AG.
Olk, B. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Attention and aging: Measuring effects of involuntary and voluntary orienting in isolation and in combination. British Journal of Psychology, 106, 235-252. 10.1111/bjop.12082.
Risko, E.F. & Kingstone, A. (2015)*. Attention in the wild: Visual attention in complex, dynamic and social environments (pp. 466-487). In Hoffman, R.R., Hancock, P., Scerbo, M., Parasuraman, R. & Szalma, J. L. (Eds.) The Cambridge Handbook of Applied Perception Research. Cambridge University Press.
Solman, G. J. F. & Kingstone, A. (2015). Endogenous strategy in exploration. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception & Performance, 41(6):1634-1649. 10.1037/xhp0000106.
Varao-Sousa TL, Kingstone A (2015). Memory for lectures: how lecture format impacts the learning experience. PLoS ONE 10(11): e0141587. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0141587
2014
Anderson, G. M., Foulsham, T., Nasiopoulos, E., Chapman, C. S. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Hide and seek: The theory of mind of visual concealment and search. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 76, 907-913.
Chisholm, J. D., Chapman, C. S., Amm, M., Bischof, W. F., Smilek, D. & Kingstone, A. (2014). A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives. PLoS ONE, 9(3): e92696. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0092696
Chisholm, J. D. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Knowing and avoiding: The influence of distractor awareness on oculomotor capture. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 76, 1258-1264.
Chisholm, J. D., Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2014). From gestures to gaming: Visible embodiment of remote actions. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 67, 609-624.
Foulsham, T., Chapman, C., Nasiopoulos, E. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Top-down and bottom-up aspects of active search in a real world environment. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 68, 8-19.
Franklin, M.S., Mrazek, M.D., Anderson, C.L., Johnston, C., Smallwood, J., Kingstone, A. & Schooler, J. (2014). Tracking distraction: The relationship between mind-wandering, meta-awareness, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptomatology. Journal of Attention Disorders. doi:10.1177/1087054714543494.
Nasiopoulos, E, Dong, Y., & Kingstone, A. (2014). Evaluation of high dynamic range content viewing experience using eye-tracking data. IEEE Heterogeneous Networking for Quality, Reliability, Security and Robustness (QShine). 13-17. doi: 10.1109/QSHINE.2014.69286532014
Risko, E.F., Medimorec, S., Chisholm, J. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Rotating with rotated text. A natural behaviour approach to investigating cognitive offloading. Cognitive Science, 38, 537-564.
Solman, G. J. F. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Balancing energetic and cognitive resources: Memory use during search depends on the orienting effector. Cognition, 132, 443-454.
Walker, E., Risko, E.F. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Fillers as signals. Evidence from a Question-Answering paradigm. Discourse Processes, 51, 264-286.
Wu, D. W.-L., Anderson, N. C., Bischof, W. F., & Kingstone, A. (2014). Temporal dynamics of eye movements are related to differences in scene complexity and clutter. Journal of Vision, 14(9):8, 1–14. doi:10.1167/14.9.8
Wu, D.W.-L., Bischof, W.F., Anderson, N. C., Jakobsen, T. & Kingstone, A. (2014). The influence of personality on social attention. Personality and Individual Differences, 60, 25-29.
Wu, D.W.-L., Bischof, W.F. & Kingstone, A. (2014). Natural gaze signaling in a social context. Evolution & Human Behavior, 35, 211-218.
2013
Anderson, N. C., Bischof, W. F., Laidlaw, K. E. W., Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Recurrence quantification analysis of eye movements. Behavior Research Methods, 45, 842-856.
Cheng, J. T., Tracy, J. L., Foulsham, T., & Kingstone, A., & Henrich, J. (2013). Two ways to the top: Evidence that dominance and prestige are distinct yet viable avenues to social rank and influence. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 104, 103-125.
Chisholm, J. D., Risko, E. F. & Kingstone, A. (2013). The embodiment of focus: Investigating the impact of leaning behavior on our cognitive state and other's perception of our cognitive state. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 39, 100-110.
Coleman, D., Romao, T., Villamin, C. Sinnett, S. Jakobsen, T. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Finding meaning in all the right places: A novel measurement of dramatic structure in film and television narratives. Projections: The Journal for Movies and Mind, 7, 108-126. dpi: 10.3167/proj.2013.070206
Dalrymple, K., Barton, J. & Kingstone, A. (2013) A world unglued: Simultanagnosia as a spatial restriction of attention. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 7, 145. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00145
Dalrymple, K., Gray, A., Perler, B., Birmingham, E., Bischof, W.F., Barton, J. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Eyeing the eyes in social scenes: Evidence for top-down control of stimulus selection in simultanagnosia. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 30, 25-40.
Farley, J., Risko, E.F., Kingstone, A. (2013). Everyday attention and lecture retention: The effects of time, fidgeting, and mind wandering. Frontiers in Psychology, 4: 619. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00619
Foulsham, T., Gray, A., Nasiopoulos, W. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Leftward biases in picture scanning and line bisection: A gaze-contingent window study. Vision Research, 78, 14-25.
Foulsham, T., Farley, J. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Mind wandering in sentence reading: Decoupling the link between mind and eye. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 67, 51-59.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Fixation dependent memory for natural scenes: An experimental test of scanpath theory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 142, 41-56.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Optimal and preferred eye landing positions in objects and scenes. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 66, 1707-1728.
Foulsham, T., & Kingstone, A. (2013). Where Have Eye Been? Observers Can Recognise Their Own Fixations. Perception, 42(10), 1085–1089.
Franklin, M.S., Mrazek, M.D., Anderson, C.L., Smallwood, J., Kingstone, A. & Schooler, J. (2013). The silver lining of a mind in the clouds: Interesting musings are associated with positive mood while mind-wandering. Frontiers in Psychology, 4: 583. dpi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00583.
Freeth, M., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2013). What affects social attention? Social presence, eye contact and autistic traits. PLoS ONE. 8(1): e53286. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0053286
Lanthier, S. N., Risko, E.F., Smilek, D. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Measuring the separate effects of practice and fatigue on eye movements during visual search. Cognitive Science Society, 35, 2820-2825.
Levy, J., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Monsters are people too. Biology Letters, 20120850. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.0850
Martín-Arévalo, E., Kingstone, A. & Lupiáñez, J. (2013). Is “inhibition of return” due to the inhibition of the return of attention? Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 66, 347-359.
Risko, E.F., Buchanan, D., S., Medimorec, S. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Everyday attention: Mind wandering and computer use during lectures. Computers & Education, 68, 275-283.
Risko, E.F., Foulsham, T., Dawson, S. & Kingstone, A. (2013). The collaborative lecture annotation system (CLAS): A new tool for distributed learning. IEEE Transactions on learning technologies, 6, 4-13. doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/TLT.2012.15
Wu, D.W.-L., Bischof, W.F. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Looking while eating: The importance of social context to social attention. Scientific Reports, 3, 2356; DOI:10.1038/ srep02356.
Wu, D.W.-L., Chapman, C. S., Walker, E., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Isolating the perceptual from the social: Tapping in shared space results in improved synchrony. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 39, 1218-1233.
Wu, D.W.-L., DiGiacomo, A. & Kingstone, A. (2013). A sustainable building promotes pro-environmental behavior: An observational study on food disposal. PLoS ONE. 8(1): e53856. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0053856
Wu, D.W.-L., Jakobsen, T., Anderson, N. C., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2013). Why we should not forget about the non-social world: Subjective preferences, exploratory eye movements, and individual differences. Cognitive Science Society, 35, 3801-3806.
2012
Birmingham, E., Ristic, J. & Kingstone, A. (2012)*. Investigating social attention: A case for increasing stimulus complexity in the laboratory. (pp. 251-276) In J. A. Burack, J. T. Enns and N. A. Fox. (Eds.) Cognitive Neuroscience, Development, and Psychopathology. Oxford University Press.
Chisholm, J. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Improved top-down control reduces oculomotor capture: The case of action video game players. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 74, 257-262.
Dawson, S., Macfadyen, L., Risko, E., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2012) Using technology to encourage self-directed learning: The Collaborative Lecture Annotation System (CLAS). Future Challenges, Sustainable Futures, proceedings for ASCILITE. Wellington, New Zealand.
Dodd, MD, Weiss, N., McDonnell, G. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Gaze cues influence memory... but not for long. Acta Psychologica, 141, 270-275.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Modeling the influence of central and peripheral information on saccade biases in gaze-contingent scene viewing. Visual Cognition, 20, 546-579.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Goal-driven and bottom-up gaze in an active real-world search task. Proceedings of the Symposium on Eye Tracking Research and Applications, 7, 189-192 ISBN: 978-1-4503-1221-9 doi: 10.1145/2168556.2168590
Kwart, D.G., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Age and beauty are in the eye of the beholder. Perception, 41, 925-938.
Laidlaw, K.E.W., Risko, E.F. & Kingstone, A. (2012). A new look at social attention: Orienting to the eyes is not (entirely) under volitional control. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 38, 1132-1143.
Risko, E.F., Anderson, N., Lanthier, S. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Curious eyes: Individual differences in personality predict eye movement behavior in scene viewing. Cognition, 122, 86-90.
Risko, E. F., Laidlaw, K., Freeth, M., Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Social attention with real vs. reel stimuli: Toward an empirical approach to concerns about ecological validity. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 6:143. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00143
Risko, E.F., Sarwal, A., Anderson, N., Engelhardt, M. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Everyday attention: Variation in mind wandering and memory in a lecture. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 26, 234-242.
Ristic, J. & Kingstone, A. (2012). A new form of human spatial attention: Automated symbolic orienting. Visual Cognition, 20, 244-264.
Ristic, J., Landry, M. & Kingstone, A. (2012). Automated symbolic orienting: The missing link. Frontiers in Cognition. 3:560. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00560
van Zoest, W., Kingstone, A. & Theeuwes, J. (2012). The influence of visual search efficiency on the time-course of identity-based SR-compatibility. Acta Psychologica, 120, 101-109.
Walker, E., Lanthier, S., Risko, E.F., & Kingstone, A. (2012). The effects of personal music devices onpedestrian behaviour. Safety Science, 50, 123-128.
2011
Anderson, N., Risko, E.F. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Exploiting human sensitivity to gaze for tracking the eyes. Behavior Research Methods, 43, 843-852.
Brennan, AA., Watson, MR., Kingstone, A. & Enns, JT. (2011). Person perception informs understanding of cognition during visual search. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 73, 1672-1693.
Dalrymple. K. A., Birmingham, E. Bischof, W.F., Barton, JS. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Opening a window on attention: Documenting and simulating recovery from simultanagnosia. Cortex, 47, 787-799.
Dalrymple. K. A., Birmingham, E. Bischof, W.F., Barton, JS. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Experiencing simultanagnosia through windowed viewing of complex social scenes. Brain Research, 1367, 265-277.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Look at my poster! Active gaze, preference and memory during a poster session. Perception, 40, 1387-1389.
Foulsham, T., Barton, J.J.S., Kingstone, A., Dewhurst, R. & Underwood, G. (2011). Modeling eye movements in visual agnosia with a saliency map approach: bottom-up guidance or top-down strategy? Neural Networks, 24, 665-677.
Foulsham, T., Alan, R. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Scrambled eyes? Disrupting scene structure impedes focal processing and increases bottom-up guidance. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 73, 2008-2025\.
Foulsham, T., Teszka, R. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Saccade control in natural images is shaped by the information visible at fixation: Evidence from asymmetric gaze-contingent windows. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 73, 266-283.
Foulsham, T., Walker, E. & Kingstone, A. (2011). The where, what and when of gaze allocation in the lab and the natural environment. Vision Research, 51, 1920-1931.
Laidlaw, K.E.W., Foulsham, T., Kuhn, G. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Potential social interactions are important to social attention. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108, 5548-5553.
Risko, E.F. & Kingstone, A. (2011). Eyes wide shut: Implied social presence, eye tracking and attention. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 73, 291-296.
Sinnett, S. Hodges, N., Chua, R. & Kingstone (2011). Embodiment of motor skills when observing expert and novice athletes. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 64, 657-668.
2010
Anderson, C. & Kingstone, A. (2010). A meeting of the minds: Expert discussions of mental processes in the human brain. Cortex, 46, 134-135.
Andrews, TJ., Davies-Thompson, J., Kingstone, A. & Young, AW. (2010). Internal and external features of the face are represented holistically in face-selective regions of visual cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 30, 3544-3552.
Chisholm, J. Hickey, C., Theeuwes, J. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Reduced attentional capture in action video game players. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 72, 667-671.
Dalrymple, K. A., Bischof, W. F., Cameron, D. Barton, J.J.S. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Simulating simultanagnosia: Spatially constricted vision mimics local capture and the global processing deficit. Experimental Brain Research, 202, 445-455.
Dalrymple, K. A. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Time to act and attend to the real mechanisms of action and attention. British Journal of Psychology, 101, 213-216.
Hunt, A., van Zoest, W. & Kingstone, A. (2010)*. Attending to emerging representations: The importance of task context and time of response. In K. Nobre and J. Coull (Eds.) Attention and Time. (pp. 3-15) Oxford Press.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A. (2010) Asymmetries in the direction of saccades during perception of scenes and fractals: Effects of image type and image features. Vision Research, 50, 779-795.
Foulsham, T., Cheng, J.T., Tracy, J.L., Henrich, J. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Gaze allocation in a dynamic situation: Effects of social status and speaking. Cognition, 117, 319-331.
Kingstone, A. (2010)*. Mike’s Attentional Network. In P.A. Reuter-Lorenz, K. Baynes, G. R. Mangun, & E. Phelps, (Eds.) The Cognitive Neuroscience of Mind: A Tribute to Michael S Gazzaniga. (pp. 99-110) MIT Press
Laidlaw, K.E.W. & Kingstone, A. (2010). The time course of vertical, horizontal and oblique saccade trajectories: Evidence for greater distractor interference during vertical saccades. Vision Research, 50, 829-837.
Olk, B., Hildebrandt, H. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Involuntary but not voluntary orienting contributes to a disengage deficit in visual neglect. Cortex, 46, 1149-1164.
Sinnett, S. & Kingstone, A. (2010). A preliminary investigation regarding the effect of tennis grunting: Does white noise during a tennis shot have a negative impact on shot perception? PLoS ONE, 5, e13148.
Sinnett, S. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Are grunters cheaters? The effects of grunting when judging the direction of a tennis shot. Cognitive Science Society, 32, 1489-1492.
Skarratt, P.A., Cole, G.G. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Social inhibition of return. Acta Psychologica, 134, 48-54.
Theeuwes, J. Mathôt, S. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Object-based attention and eye movements: The eyes prefer to stay within the same object. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 72, 597-601.
van Zoest, W., Hunt, A. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Representations in visual cognition: It’s about time. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 19, 116-120.
Watson, M.R., Brennan, A.A., Kingstone, A. & Enns, J.T. (2010). Looking versus seeing: Strategies alter eye movements during visual search. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 17, 543-549.
2009
Birmingham, E. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Human social attention: A new look at past, present and future investigations. The Year in Cognitive Neuroscience 2009: NY Academy of Sciences,1156, 118-140.
Birmingham, E. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Human social attention. Progress in Brain Research, 176, 309-320.
Birmingham, E., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Get real! Resolving the debate about equivalent social stimuli. Visual Cognition, 17, 904-924.
Birmingham, E., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Saliency does not account for fixations to eyes within social scenes. Vision Research, 49, 2992-3000.
Dalrymple, K. A., Bischof, W. F., Cameron, D. Barton, J.J.S. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Global perception in simultanagnosia is not as simple as a game of connect-the-dots. Vision Research, 49, 1901-1908.
Dalrymple, K. A., Kingstone, A. & Handy, T. C. (2009). ERP evidence for a dual-locus model of global/local processing. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 26, 456-470.
Foulsham, T. Barton, J.S., Kingstone, A., Dewhurst, R. & Underwood, G. (2009). Fixation and saliency during search of natural scenes: the case of visual agnosia. Neuropsychologia, 47, 1994-2003.
Foulsham, T. & Kingstone, A (2009). Strategy, not saliency, may explain eye movement patterns in visual agnosia. Commentary on Mannan, S.K., Kennard, C. & Husain, M. (2009). The role of visual salience in directing eye movements in visual object agnosia. Current Biology, 19, R247-248.
Kingstone, A. (2009). Taking a real look at social attention. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 19, 52–56.
Kuhn, G. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Look away! Eyes and arrows engage oculomotor responses automatically. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 71, 314-327.
Miller, M. B. & Kingstone, A. (2009), Preface. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1156: vii. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.04533.x
Olk, B. & Kingstone, A. (2009). A new look at aging and performance in the antisaccade task: The impact of response selection. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 21, 406-421.
Ristic, J. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Rethinking attentional development: Reflexive and volitional orienting in children and adults. Developmental Science, 12, 289-296.
Sinnett, S., Snyder, J. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Role of the lateral prefrontal cortex in visual object-based selective attention. Experimental Brain Research, 194, 191-196.
Smilek, D., Weiheimer, L., Kwan, D., Reynolds, M. & Kingstone, A. (2009). Hiding and finding: The relationship between visual concealment and visual search. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 71, 1793-1806.
Snyder, J. S., Schmidt, W.C. & Kingstone, A. (2009). There's little return for attentional momentum. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 35, 1726-1737.
2008
Birmingham, E., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Social attention and real world scenes: The roles of action, competition and social content. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 61, 986-976
Birmingham, E., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Gaze selection in complex social scenes. Visual Cognition, 15, 341-355.
Dodd, M., Van der Stigchel, S., Leghari, M. A., Fung, G. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Attentional SNARC: There’s something special about numbers (let us count the ways). Cognition, 108, 810 - 818.
Foulsham, T. Kingstone, A. & Underwood, G. (2008). Turning the world around: patterns in saccade direction vary with picture orientation. Vision Research, 48, 1777-1790.
Gibson, B. S., Folk, C.L., Theeuwes, J. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Attentional capture. Visual Cognition, 16, 145-154.
Hunt, A., Chapman, C. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Taking a long look at action and time perception. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 34, 125-136.
Kingstone, A. and Miller, . M. B. (2008), Preface. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1124: ix. doi: 10.1196/annals.1440.016
Kingstone, A., Smilek, D. & Eastwood, J. D. (2008). Cognitive ethology: A new approach for studying human cognition. British Journal of Psychology, 99, 317 - 345.
Kingstone, A., Smilek, D. & Eastwood, J. D. (2008). Three responses to cognitive ethology. British Journal of Psychology, 99, 355 - 359.
Morein-Zamir, S. Hommersen, P., Johnston, C. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Novel measures of response performance and inhibition in children with ADHD. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 36, 1199-1210.
Olk, B., Cameron, B. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Enhanced orienting effects: Evidence for an interaction principle. Visual Cognition, 16, 979-1000.
Olk, B. Symons, L. A. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Take a look at the bright side: Effects of contrast polarity on gaze direction judgments. Perception & Psychophysics, 70, 1298-1304.
Oruc, I., Sinnett, S., Bischof, W.F., Soto-Faraco, S., Lock, K. & Kingstone, A. (2008). The effect of attention on the illusory capture of motion in bimodal stimuli, Brain Research, 1242, 200-208.
Smilek, D., Eastwood, J. D. Reynolds, M. G. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Metacognition and change detection: Do lab and life really converge? Consciousness & Cognition, 17, 1056 - 1061.
Tipper, C., Handy, T., Giesbrecht, B. & Kingstone, A. (2008). Brain responses to biological relevance. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 20, 879-891.
2007
Birmingham, E., Visser, T., Snyder, J. & Kingstone, A. (2007). Inhibition of return: Unraveling a paradox. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 14, 957-63.
Birmingham, E., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2007). Why do we look at eyes? Journal of Eye Movement Research, 1 (1), 1-6.
Chapman, C., Hunt, A. & Kingstone, A. (2007). Squeezing uncertainty from saccadic compression. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 1 (2), 1-4.
Dalrymple, K. A., Kingstone, A. & Barton, J.J.S. (2007). Seeing trees or seeing forests in simultanagnosia: Attentional capture can be local or global., Neuropsychologia, 45, 871-875.
Hunt, A., Cooper, R. M., Hungr, C. & Kingstone, A. (2007). The effect of emotional faces on eye movements and attention. Visual Cognition, 15, 513-531.
Hunt, A., von Mühlenen, A. & Kingstone, A. (2007). The timecourse of attentional and oculomotor capture reveals a common cause. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 33, 271-284.
Morein-Zamir, S., Chua, R., Franks, I. Negelkerke, P. & Kingstone, A. (2007). Predictability influences stopping and response control. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 33, 149-162.
Smilek, D., Eastwood, J. D. Reynolds, M. G. & Kingstone, A. (2007). Metacognitive errors in change detection: Missing the gap between lab and life. Consciousness & Cognition, 16, 52-57.
Ristic, J. Wright, A. Kingstone, A. (2007). Attentional control and reflexive orienting to gaze and arrow cues. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 14, 964-969.
Snyder, J. & Kingstone, A. (2007). Inhibition of return at multiple locations and its impact on visual search. Visual Cognition, 15, 238-256.
Soto-Faraco, S., Kingstone, A. & Spence, C. (2007). Integrating motion information across sensory modalities: The role of top-down factors. Progress in Brain Research, 155, 54-67.
van Zoest, W., Lleras, A., Kingstone, A. F., & Enns, J. T. (2007). In sight, out of mind: The role of eye movements in the rapid resumption of visual search. Perception & Psychophysics, 69, 1204-1217.
2006
*Giesbrecht, B., Kingstone, A., Handy, T, & Mangun, G. R. (2006). Functional neuroimaging of human attention. In R. Cabeza and A. Kingstone (Eds.) Handbook on functional neuroimaging of cognition (2nd Edition). (pp. 85-111). MIT Press (2nd Edition).
Morein-Zamir, S. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Fixation offset and stop signal intensity effects on saccadic countermanding: A crossmodal investigation. Experimental Brain Research, 175, 453-462.
Morein-Zamir, S., Negelkerke, P., Chua, R., Franks, I. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Measuring online volitional response control with a continuous tracking task Behavior Research Methods, 38, 638-647.
Gibson, B.S. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Visual attention and the semantics of space: Beyond central and peripheral cues. Psychological Science, 17, 626-627.
van Zoest, W., Giesbrecht, B., Enns, J. T., & Kingstone, A. (2006). New reflections on visual search: Inter-item symmetry matters! Psychological Science, 17, 535-542.
Morein-Zamir, S., Negelkerke, P., Chua, R., Franks, I. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Compatibility effects in stopping and response initiation in a continuous tracking task. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 59, 2148-2161.
Olk, B., Change, E., Kingstone, A. & Ro, T. (2006). Modulation of antisaccades by transcranial magnetic stimulation of the human frontal eye field. Cerebral Cortex, 16, 76-82.
Ristic, J., Wright, A. & Kingstone, A. (2006). The number line effect reflects top-down control. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 13, 862-868.
Ristic, J. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Attention to arrows: Pointing to a new direction. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 59, 1921-1930.
Shimozaki, S., Kingstone, A., Olk, B., Stowe, B. & Eckstein, M (2006). Classification images of two right hemisphere patients: A window into the attentional mechanisms of spatial neglect. Brain Research, 1080, 26-52.
Smilek, D., Birmingham, E., Cameron, D., Bischof, W.F. & Kingstone, A. (2006). Cognitive ethology and exploring attention in real world scenes. Brain Research, 1080, 101-119.
2005
Borowsky, R., Loehr, J., Friesen, C.K., Kraushaar, G., Kingstone A., & Sarty, G. (2005). Modularity and intersection of ‘what’, ‘where’, and ‘how’ processing of visual stimuli: A New Method of fMRI Localization. Brain Topography, 18, 67-75.
Friesen, C. K., Moore, C. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Does gaze direction really trigger a shift of spatial attention? Brain & Cognition. 57, 66-69.
*Kingstone, A., Smilek, D., Birmingham, E., Cameraon, D. & Bischof, W.F. (2005). Cognitive ethology: Giving real life to attention research. In J. Duncan, L. Phillips & P. McLeod (Eds.) Measuring the mind: Speed, control & age. (pp. 341-358). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Medler, D.A., Dawson, M.R.W. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Functional localization and double dissociations: the relationship between internal structure and behavior. Brain & Cognition, 57, 146-150.
Miller, M. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Taking the high road on subcortical transfer. Brain and Cognition, 57, 162-164.
Ristic, J. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Taking control of reflexive social attention. Cognition, 94, B55-65.
Ristic, J., Mottron, L., Friesen, C. K., Iarocci, G., Burack, J. A. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Eyes are special but not for everyone: The case of autism. Cognitive Brain Research, 24, 715-718.
*Soto-Faraco, S. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Multisensory integration of dynamic information. In G. Calvert, C. Spence & B. Stein (Eds.). Handbook of Multisensory Processes. (pp. 49-68) . MIT Press.
Soto-Faraco, S., Morein-Zamir, S. & Kingstone, A. (2005). On audiovisual spatial synergy: The fragility `of the phenomenon. Perception & Psychophysics, 67, 444-457.
Soto-Faraco, S., Sinnett, S. Alsius, A. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Spatial orienting of tactile attention induced by gaze direction. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 12, 1024-1031.
Soto-Faraco, S., Spence, C. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Assessing the automaticity in the visual capture of auditory apparent motion. Acta Psychologica, 118, 47-70.
Tipper, C. & Kingstone, A. (2005). Is inhibition of return a reflexive effect? Cognition, 97, B55-62.
2004
Austen, E., Soto-Faraco, S., Enns, J. T. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Mislocations of touch to a fake hand. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience, 4, 170-181.
Chaston, A. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Time estimation: The effect of cortically mediated attention. Brain & Cognition, 55, 286-289.
Donovan, C-L, Lindsay, S. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Flexible and abstract resolutions to crossmodal conflicts. Brain & Cognition, 56, 118-122.
Fecteau, J. H., Kingstone, A. & Enns, J. T. (2004). Hemisphere differences in explicit and implicit word reading. Consciousness and Cognition, 13, 550-554.
Friesen, C. K., Ristic, J., & Kingstone, A. (2004). Attentional effects of counterpredictive gaze and arrow cues. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 30, 319-329.
Giesbrecht, B. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Right hemisphere involvement in the attentional blink: Evidence from a split-brain patient. Brain & Cognition, 55, 303-306.
Giesbrecht, B., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Seeing the light: Adapting luminance reveals low-level visual processes in the attentional blink. Brain & Cognition, 55, 307-309.
Grabowecky, M. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Can semantic information be transferred between hemispheres in the split-brain? Brain & Cognition, 55, 310-313.
Hunt, A. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Multisensory executive functioning. Brain & Cognition, 55, 325-327.
Hunt, A., Olk, B., von Mühlenen, A. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Integration of competing saccade programs. Cognitive Brain Research, 19, 206-208.
Kingstone, A., Tipper, C., Ristic, J., & Ngan, E. (2004). The eyes have it!: An fMRI investigation. Brain & Cognition, 55, 269-271.
Morein-Zamir, S., Negelkerke, P., Chua, R., Franks, I. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Stopping a prepared response versus ongoing response: Is there more than one kind of stopping? Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 11, 1034-1140.
Olk, B., Wee, J. & Kingstone, A. (2004). The effect of hemispatial neglect on the perception of centre. Brain & Cognition, 55, 365-367.
Roggeveen, A., Kingstone, A. & Enns, J. (2004). Influence of inter-item symmetry in visual search. Spatial Vision, 17, 443-464.
Soto-Faraco, S., Spence, C., & Kingstone, A. (2004). Crossmodal dynamic capture. congruency effects in the perception of motion across sensory modalities. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 30, 330-345.
Soto-Faraco, S., Spence, C., Lloyd. D., & Kingstone, A. (2004). Moving multisensory research along: Motion perception across sensory modalities. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13, 29–32.
Soto-Faraco, S., Spence, C. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Congruency effects between auditory and tactile motion: Extending the cross-modal dynamic capture phenomenon. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience, 4, 208-217.
Theeuwes, J., Kramer, A. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Attentional capture modulates perceptual sensitivity. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 11, 551-554.
Valsangkar-Smyth, M. A., Donovan, C-L., Sinnett, S., Dawson, M.R.W. & Kingstone, A. (2004). Hemispheric performance in object-based attention. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 11, 84-91.
Wig, G. S., Miller, M. Kingstone, A., & Kelley, W. (2004). Separable routes to human memory formation: Dissociating task and material contributions in prefrontal cortex. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 16, 139–148.
2003
Friesen, C. K. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Covert and overt orienting to gaze direction cues and the effects of fixation offset. Neuroreport, 14, 489-93.
Friesen, C. K. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Abrupt onsets and gaze cues trigger independent reflexive attention effects. Cognition, 87, B1-B10.
Giesbrecht, B., Bischof, W. F. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Visual masking during the attentional blink: Tests of the object substitution hypothesis. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 29, 238-258.
Hunt, A. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Inhibition of return: Dissociating attentional and oculomotor components. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 29, 348-354.
Hunt, A. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Covert and overt voluntary attention: Linked or independent? Cognitive Brain Research, 18, 102 – 105.
Kingstone, A., Smilek, D., Ristic, J., Friesen, C. K. & Eastwood, J. D. (2003). Attention, researchers! It's time to pay attention to the real world. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 12, 176-180.
Morein-Zamir, S., Soto-Faraco, S. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Auditory capture of vision: Examing temporal ventriloquism. Cognitive Brain Research, 17, 154-163.
Soto-Faraco, S., Kingstone, A. & Spence, C. (2003). Multisensory contributions to motion perception Neuropsychologia, 41, 1847-1863.
Olk, B. & Kingstone, A. (2003). Why are antisaccades slower than prosaccades? A novel finding using a new paradigm. Neuroreport, 14, 151-155.
2002
Caclin, A., Soto-Faraco, S., Kingstone, A., & Spence, C. Tactile capture of audition. (2002). Perception & Psychophysics, 64, 616-630.
Ristic, J., Friesen, C. K., & Kingstone, A. (2002). Are eyes special? It depends on how you look at it. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 9, 507-513.
Kingstone, A., Danziger, S., Langton, S. R. H. & Soto-Faraco, S. (2002). Attentional capture: Biological relevance, multisensory stimulation, and consciousness. Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 23, 1-30.
Kingstone, A. , Klein, R.M., Morein-Zamir, S., Hunt, A., Maxner, C., & Fisk, J. (2002). Components of attention: Chronometric techniques and Parkinson's disease. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 24, 951-967.
Miller, M. Kingstone, A. & Gazzaniga, M. S. (2002). Hemispheric encoding asymmetry is more apparent than real. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 14, 702-708.
Soto-Faraco, S., Lyons, J., Gazzaniga, M. S., & Spence, C. & Kingstone, A. (2002). The ventriloquist in motion: Illusory capture of dynamic information across sensory modalities. Cognitive Brain Research, 14, 139-146.
Soto-Faraco, S., Spence, C., Kingstone, A., Hillstrom, A. P. & Shapiro, K. (2002). A crossmodal attentional blink between vision and touch. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 9, 731-738.
2001
Danziger, S., Kingstone, A.& Ward, R. (2001). Environmentally defined frames of reference: Their sensitivity to spatial cues and attention, and their time course. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 27, 494-503.
Fecteau, J. H., Enns, J. T., & Kingstone, A. (2001). Competition-induced visual field differences in search. Psychological Science, 11, 386-393.
Giesbrecht, B., Dixon, P., & Kingstone, A. (2001). Cued shifts of attention and memory encoding in partial report: A dual-task approach. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 54A, 695– 726.
Kingstone, A. (2001). Cognitive neuroscience and multidisciplinary research. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 55, 81-82.
Kingstone, A. (2001). Multisensory integration: A cognitive neuroscience approach. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 55, 121-122.
Snyder, J. & Kingstone, A. (2001). Inhibition of return at multiple locations in visual search: When you see it and when you don't. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 54, 1221-1237.
Snyder, J., Schmidt, W. C. & Kingstone, A. (2001). Attentional momentum does not underlie inhibition of return. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 27, 1420-1432.
Spence, C., Kingstone, A., Shore, D. I., & Gazzaniga, M. S. (2001). Representation of visuotactile space in the split-brain. Psychological Science, 12, 90-93.
Spence, C., Shore, D. I., Gazzaniga, M. S., Soto-Faraco, S., & Kingstone, A. (2001). Failure to remap visuotactile space across the midline in the split-brain. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 55, 133-140.
2000 - 1991
Kingstone, A., Friesen, C. K. & Gazzaniga, M. S. (2000). Reflexive joint attention depends on lateralized cortical connections. Psychological Science, 11, 159-166.
Snyder, J. & Kingstone, A. (2000). Inhibition of return and visual search: How many separate loci are inhibited? Perception & Psychophysics, 62, 452-458.
Danziger, S. & Kingstone, A. (1999). Unmasking the inhibition of return phenomenon. Perception & Psychophysics, 61, 1024-1037.
Kingstone, A. & Bischof, W. F. (1999). Perceptual grouping and motion coherence in visual search. Psychological Science, 10, 151-156.
Kingstone, A. & Pratt, J. (1999). Inhibition of return is composed of attentional and oculomotor processes. Perception & Psychophysics, 61, 1046-1054.
Danziger, S., Kingstone, A. & Rafal, R.D. (1998). Orienting to extinguished signals in hemispatial neglect. Psychological Science, 9, 119-123.
Danziger, S., Kingstone, A., & Snyder, J. (1998). Inhibition of return to successively stimulated locations in a sequential visual search paradigm. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 24, 1467- 1475.
Friesen, C. K. & Kingstone, A. (1998). The eyes have it!: Reflexive orienting is triggered by nonpredictive gaze. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 5, 490-495.
Ivry, R. B., Franz, E. A., Kingstone, A., & Johnston, J. (1998). The psychological refractory period effect following callosotomy: Uncoupling of lateralized response codes. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 24, 463-480.
Taylor, T., Kingstone, A., & Klein, R. M. (1998). The disappearance of foveal and non-foveal stimuli: Decomposing the gap effect. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 52, 192-200.
Pratt, J., Kingstone, A. & Khoe, W. (1997). Motor-based versus attention-based theories of inhibition of return. Perception & Psychophysics, 59, 964-971.
Handy, T. C., Kingstone, A. & Mangun, G. R. (1996). Spatial distribution of visual attention: Perceptual sensitivity and response latency. Perception & Psychophysics, 58, 613-627.
Rafal, R., Gershberg, F., Egly, R., Ivry, R.B., Kingstone, A. & Ro, T. (1996). Response channel activation and the lateral prefrontal cortex. Neuropsychologia, 34, 1197-1202.
Enns, J. T. & Kingstone, A. (1995). Access to global and local properties in visual search for compound stimuli. Psychological Science, 6, 283-291.
Kingstone, A., Enns, J., Mangun, G. R., & Gazzaniga, M.S. (1995). Guided visual search is a left hemisphere process in split-brain patients. Psychological Science, 6, 118-121.
Kingstone, A., Fendrich, R., Wessinger, C.M. & Reuter-Lorenz, P. A. (1995). Are microsaccades responsible for the gap effect? Perception & Psychophysics, 57, 796-801.
Kingstone, A. & Gazzaniga, M.S. (1995). Subcortical transfer of higher-order information: More illusory than real? Neuropsychology, 9, 321-328.
Klein, R. & Kingstone, A. (1995). Against a role for attentional disengagement in the gap effect: A friendly amendment to Tam & Stelmach (1993). Perception & Psychophysics, 57, 573-577.
Klein, R. & Kingstone, A. (1994). Why do visual offsets reduce saccadic latencies? Brain and Behavioral Sciences, 16, 583-584.
Kingstone, A. & Klein, R. (1993). Visual offsets facilitate saccadic latency: Does predisengagement of visuospatial attention mediate this gap effect? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 19, 1251-1265.
Kingstone, A. & Klein, R. (1993). What are human express saccades? Perception & Psychophysics, 54, 260-273.
Kingstone, A. (1992). Combining expectancies. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 44A, 69-104.
Kingstone, A. & Klein, R.M. (1991). Combining shape and position expectancies: Hierarchical processing and selective inhibition. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 17, 512-519.
Maylor, E.A., Rabbitt, P.M.A., & Kingstone, A. (1990). Effects of alcohol on lexical access. Psychopharmacology, 95, 119-123.
Maylor, E.A., Rabbitt, P.M.A., & Kingstone, A. (1990). Effects of alcohol on word categorization and recognition memory. British Journal of Psychology, 78, 233-239.