2011
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-011-0102-0
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Adaptive memory: fitness relevant stimuli show a memory advantage in a game of pelmanism

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Cited by 20 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
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“…The only exception to this was the high false alarm rate for ancestral threatening stimuli, which may be explained by a better-safe-than-sorry heuristic. These results seem to be in opposition to those of Kuhbander et al (2011) and Wilson et al (2011) whose results supported the SLMTS hypothesis; this point will be discussed further in the General Discussion.…”
Section: Schmidtcontrasting
confidence: 56%
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“…The only exception to this was the high false alarm rate for ancestral threatening stimuli, which may be explained by a better-safe-than-sorry heuristic. These results seem to be in opposition to those of Kuhbander et al (2011) and Wilson et al (2011) whose results supported the SLMTS hypothesis; this point will be discussed further in the General Discussion.…”
Section: Schmidtcontrasting
confidence: 56%
“…More recent research has also indicated that the locations of threatening stimuli may be remembered better than the locations of nonthreatening stimuli (Kuhbander et al, 2011;Wilson et al, 2011). The current research was motivated by a desire to combine these areas of research and determine whether the threat superiority effect in response times translates into a threat superiority effect in location memory.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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