BarnierAJLevinKMaherA (2004b) Suppressing thoughts of past events: are repressive copers good suppressors?Cognition & Emotion (Special Issue, ‘Emotional Memory Failures’) 18: 513–31.
12.
BarnierAJSuttonJHarrisCB. (2008) A conceptual and empirical framework for the social distribution of cognition: the case of memory. Cognitive Systems Research (Special Issue, ‘Perspectives on Social Cognition’) 9: 33–51.
13.
BarnierAJSuttonJHarrisCB, et al. (2011) Evidence for socially distributed memory in the collaborative recall of older married couples? In: Paper presented in ‘Memory, Extended Mind, and Distributed Cognition’. Symposium at the 5th international conference on memory (J. Sutton (Chair)), York, UK, 31 July–5 August.
14.
BortolottiLCoxREBarnierAJ (2012) Can we create delusions in the laboratory?Philosophical Psychology25: 109–31.
15.
ChapanisA (1961) Men, machines, and models. American Psychologist16: 113–31.
16.
ComanAHirstW (2011) Cognition through a social network: the propagation of induced forgetting and practice effects. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General141: 321–36.
17.
ConwayMA (1991) In defense of everyday memory. American Psychologist46: 19–26.
18.
CoxREBarnierAJ (2010) Hypnotic illusions and clinical delusions: hypnosis as a research method. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry (Special Issue, ‘Delusion and Confabulation’) 15: 202–32.
19.
ErdelyiMH (2006) The unified theory of repression. Behavioral and Brain Sciences29: 499–511.
20.
HarrisCBKeilPGSuttonJ. (2011) We remember, we forget: collaborative remembering in older couples. Discourse Processes48: 267–303.
21.
HoskinsA (2009) Flashbulb memories, psychology and media studies: fertile ground for interdisciplinarity?Memory Studies2: 147–50.
22.
KihlstromJF (1996) Memory research: the convergence of theory and practice. In: HermannDJohnsonMMcEvoyC. (eds) Basic and Applied Memory: Theory in Context, vol. 1. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, pp. 5–25.
23.
KihlstromJF (2002) Demand characteristics in the laboratory and the clinic: conversations and collaborations with subjects and patients (Article 36c). Prevention & Treatment (Special issue honoring Martin T. Orne) 5: 1–22.
24.
KihlstromJF (2006) Repression: a unified theory of a will-o’-the-wisp. Behavioral and Brain Sciences29: 523–23.
25.
KihlstromJFBarnhardtTM (1993) The self-regulation of memory, for better and for worse, with and without hypnosis. In: WegnerDMPennebakerJW (eds) Handbook of Mental Control. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, pp. 88–125.
26.
KvavilashviliLEllisJ (2004) Ecological validity and the real-life/laboratory controversy in memory research: a critical and historical review. History and Philosophy of Psychology6: 59–80.
27.
LevyBJAndersonMC (2008) Individual differences in the suppression of unwanted memories: the executive deficit hypothesis. Acta Psychologica127: 623–35.
28.
NeisserU (1967) Cognitive Psychology. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
29.
NeisserU (1976) Cognition and Reality: Principles and Implications of Cognitive Psychology. New York: WH Freeman.
30.
NeisserU (1982) Snapshots or benchmarks? In: NeisserU (ed.) Memory Observed: Remembering in Natural Contexts. San Francisco, CA: WH Freeman, pp. 43–48.
31.
NeisserU (1991) A case of misplaced nostalgia. American Psychologist46: 34–36.
32.
NeisserU (2007) Ulric Neisser. In: LindzeyGRunyanWM (eds) A History of Psychology in Autobiography, vol. IX. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, pp. 269–301.
33.
NoreenSMacLeodMD (in press) It’s all in the detail: intentional forgetting of autobiographical memories using the autobiographical think/no-think task. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
34.
OakleyDAHalliganPW (2009) Hypnotic suggestion and cognitive neuroscience. Trends in Cognitive Sciences13: 264–70.
35.
OrneMT (1959) The nature of hypnosis: artifact and essence. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology58: 277–99.
36.
OrneMT (1962) On the social psychology of the psychological experiment: with particular reference to demand characteristics and their implications. American Psychologist17: 776–83.
37.
RoedigerHL (1991) They read an article: a commentary on the everyday memory controversy. American Psychologist46: 37–40.
38.
RowlandsM (1999) The Body in Mind. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
39.
SelwoodABarnierAJHarrisCB, et al. (2011). Trying to extend the think/no-think (TNT) paradigm to autobiographical memories. In: Paper presented at the 5th international conference on memory, York, UK, 31 July–5 August.
40.
ShapiroL (2010) James Bond and the barking dog: evolution and extended cognition. Philosophy of Science77: 400–18.
41.
SheehanPW (1982) Contrasting research methodologies-humanism vs. standard method. Australian Journal of Psychology34: 239–47.
42.
SuttonJ (2008) Between individual and collective memory: interaction, coordination, distribution. Social Research75: 23–48.
43.
SuttonJHarrisCBKeilP. (2010) The psychology of memory, extended cognition, and socially distributed remembering. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences9: 521–60.
44.
TulvingE (1991) Memory research is not a zero-sum game. American Psychologist46: 41–42.
45.
WinogradE (1988) Continuities between ecological and laboratory approaches to memory. In: NeisserUWinogradE (eds) Remembering Reconsidered: Ecological and Traditional Approaches to the Study of Memory. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 11–20.
46.
WoodyEZSzechtmanH (2011) Using hypnosis to develop and test models of psychopathology. Journal of Mind-Body Regulation1: 4–16.