Publications

Yamashiro, J. and Pérez-Amparán, E. (2023). Memory media design shapes perceived temporal distance of depicted historical events: Color vs. Black and White photographs. Journal for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, in press.

Sözer, E., *Yamashiro, J., and Hirst, W. (2023). Simulating conversations: A Markov chain model of a central speaker’s mnemonic influence over a group of communicating listeners. Memory & Cognition, in press.

Hamilton, K., *Yamashiro, J., Storm, B. (2023). Rethinking cognition for a digital environment. Applied Cognitive Psychology, in press.

Storm, B., Bittner, D.L., and Yamashiro, J. (2023). The changing dynamics and consequences of memory retrieval in the age of the Internet. In Q. Wang and A. Hoskins (Eds.), The Remaking of Memory in the Age of Social Media and the Internet. Oxford University Press.

Yamashiro, J. and Pashkov, E. (2023). Varieties of frames structuring collective temporal thought. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 12(1), 29-33. https://doi.org/10.1037/mac0000102

Yamashiro, J., Liu, J., and Zhang, J. (2022). Implicit intertemporal trajectories in cognitive representations of the self and nation. Memory & Cognition, in press.

Yamashiro, J. (2022). Psychological aspects of national memory: An American case study. In J. Wertsch & H.L. Roediger, III (Eds.), Constructing National Identity: Conflicting Memories and Narratives. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Roediger, H.L., III, Putnam, A., and Yamashiro, J. (2022). National and state narcissism as reflected in overclaiming. In J. Wertsch & H.L. Roediger, III (Eds.), Constructing National Identity: Conflicting Memories and Narratives.New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Yamashiro, J. (2021). Review of the book, How Nations Remember, by J.V. Wertsch, Oxford University Press. Memory Studies, in press.

Yamashiro, J. and Roediger, H.L., III. (2021). Biased collective memories and historical overclaiming: An availability heuristic account. Memory & Cognition, 49(2), 311-322. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-020-01090-w.

Merck, C., Yamashiro, J., and Hirst, W. (2020). Remembering the big game: Social identity and memory for media events. Memory, 28(6), 795-814. DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2020.1784232

Roediger, H.L., III and Yamashiro, J. (2020). Evaluating experimental research. In R.J. Sternberg & D.F. Halpern (Eds.), Critical Thinking in Psychology, 2nd Edition (pp. 249-279). Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.

Yamashiro, J. and Hirst, W. (2020). Convergence on collective memories: Central speakers and distributed remembering. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 149(3), 461-481. DOI: 10.1037/xge0000656

Yamashiro, J. and Roediger, H.L., III. (2019). How we have fallen: Implicit trajectories in collective temporal thought. Memory, 27(8), 1158-1166. DOI:10.1080/09658211.2019.1635161

Churchill, L., Yamashiro, J., and Roediger, H.L. III. (2019). Moralized memory: Binding values predict inflated estimates of the group’s historical influence. Memory, 27(8), 1099-1109. DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2019.1623261

Yamashiro, J., Van Engen, A., and Roediger, H.L., III (2019). American Origins: Political and religious divides in U.S. collective memory. Memory Studies, 15(1), Advance online publication. DOI:10.177/150698019856065

Roediger, H.L. III and Yamashiro, J. (2019). Memory. In R.J. Sternberg & W. Pickren (Eds.), Handbook of the Intellectual History of Psychology: How Psychological Ideas Have Evolved from Past to Present (pp. 165-215). Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.

Yamashiro, J. and Roediger, H.L. III. (2019). Expanding cognition: A brief consideration of technological advances over the past 4000 years. [Peer commentary on “Digital expansion of the mind: Implications of Internet usage for memory and cognition,” by Elizabeth Marsh and Suparna Rajaram]. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 8(1), 15-19.

Hirst, W., Yamashiro, J., and Coman, A. (2018). Collective memory from a psychological perspective. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 22(5), 438-451.

Hirst, W. and Yamashiro, J. (2017). Social aspects of forgetting. In M.L. Meade, A. Barnier, P. Van Bergen, C. Harris, & J. Sutton (Eds.). Collective Remembering: How Remembering with Others Influences Memory (pp. 76-99). NY: Cambridge University Press.

Yamashiro, J. (2015). The brain basis of Samadhi: Neurological correlates of meditative absorption. New School Psychology Bulletin, 13(1), 1-10.

Yamashiro, J. and Hirst, W. (2014). Mnemonic convergence in a social network: Collective memory and extended influence. Journal for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 3(4), 272-279.

Fagin, M., Yamashiro, J., and Hirst, W. (2013). The adaptive function of distributed remembering: Contributions to the formation of collective memory. Review of Philosophy and Psychology 4(1), 91-106.