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  1. Orienting of attention.M. I. Posner - 1980 - Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 32 (1):3-25.
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  • The Principles of Psychology.William James - 1890 - London, England: Dover Publications.
    This first volume contains discussions of the brain, methods for analyzing behavior, thought, consciousness, attention, association, time, and memory.
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  • The Principles of Psychology.William James - 1890 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 11 (3):506-507.
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  • On the economy of the human-processing system.David Navon & Daniel Gopher - 1979 - Psychological Review 86 (3):214-255.
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  • Attention in Early Scientific Psychology.Gary Hatfield - 1998 - In Richard D. Wright (ed.), Visual Attention. Oxford University Press. pp. 3-25.
    Attention only "recently"--i.e. in the eighteenth century--achieved chapter status in psychology textbooks in which psychology is conceived as a natural science. This report first sets this entrance, by sketching the historical contexts in which psychology has been considered to be a natural science. It then traces the construction of phenomenological descriptions of attention from antiquity to the seventeenth century, noting various aspects of attention that were marked for discussion by Aristotle, Lucretius, Augustine, and Descartes. The chapter goes on to compare (...)
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  • The Principles of Psychology.William James - 1891 - International Journal of Ethics 1 (2):143-169.
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  • Categories and particulars: Prototype effects in estimating spatial location.Janellen Huttenlocher, Larry V. Hedges & Susan Duncan - 1991 - Psychological Review 98 (3):352-376.
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  • Lectures on the Elementary Psychology of Feeling and Attention.E. B. Titchener - 1910 - Mind 19 (76):570-574.
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  • Brightness contrast as a function of figure-ground relations.Stanley Coren - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 80 (3p1):517.
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  • Attention.W. B. Pillsbury - 1909 - International Journal of Ethics 19 (2):251-252.
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  • Perturbation model for letter identification.George Wolford - 1975 - Psychological Review 82 (3):184-199.
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  • Perceptual capacity limits in visual detection and search.William Prinzmetal & William P. Banks - 1983 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 21 (4):263-266.
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  • Attention.Charles H. Judd - 1908 - Philosophical Review 17 (6):651.
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  • Lectures on the Elementary Psychology of Feeling and Attention.Edwin B. Holt & Edward Bradford Titchener - 1909 - Philosophical Review 18 (3):338.
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  • The locus of interference in the perception of simultaneous stimuli.John Duncan - 1980 - Psychological Review 87 (3):272-300.
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  • Psychology: An Elementary Text-Book.H. Ebbinghaus & M. F. Meyer - 1908 - Dc Heath.
    Psychology has a long past, yet its real history is short. For thousands of years it has existed and has been growing older; but in the earlier part of this period it cannot boast of any continuous progress toward a riper and richer development. In the fourth century before our era that giant thinker, Aristotle, built it up into an edifice comparing very favorably with any other science of that time. But this edifice stood without undergoing any noteworthy changes or (...)
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  • Mechanisms of visual-spatial attention.Sa Hillyard - 1988 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 26 (6):493-493.
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