1

Daniel M. Bernstein

VITA

Daniel M. Bernstein

Personal Data

Address: Department of Psychologytel: (604) 599-3372

Kwantlen Polytechnic Universityemail:

12666-72nd Ave.

Surrey, BC Canada V3W 2M8

Employment and Education

Instructor, Department of Psychology, Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU), British Columbia 2005-

* Note that KPU has no rank or tenure

Visiting Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Mannheim, Germany 2016; 2018

Visiting Scholar, Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA 2009

Affiliate Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Washington, USA 2006 –

Adjunct Faculty, Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University (SFU) 2007 -

Adjunct Faculty, Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia 2006 – 2009

Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology and Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences, University of Washington 2005 – 2006

Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Department of Psychology and Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences

University of Washington 2001 - 2005

(Collaborations with Elizabeth Loftus, Geoffrey Loftus, and Andrew Meltzoff)

Ph.D. Cognitive Psychology

Simon Fraser University

Burnaby, B.C. Canada 2001

M.A. Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)

Brock University

St. Catharines, Ontario Canada 1995

B.A. (honors) Individual Major in Sleep and Dream Studies

University of California at Berkeley,

Berkeley, California 1990

Grants, Awards and Honors (funds in Canadian dollars unless otherwise noted)

PI: “Enhancing the KPU Arts Speakers Series.” Faculty of Arts Excellence and Advancement Funds (2017-2018); $3,500.

PI: “Theory of mind in children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.” KPU Professional Development Grant (2016-2017); $2,500.

PI: “Lifespan social cognition.” Insight Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (2015-2020); $167,500.

PI: “KPU-Science World speaker series: Promoting scientific literacy.” Connection Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (Co-Investigator: Rajiv Jhangiani;2015); $13,500. Note that this grant established a formal partnership between KPU and Science World to support a speaker series that is ongoing.

Member of the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists, and Scientists (2014-present, inaugural cohort)

Co-Investigator: “Reconsolidation: Theory and application.” KPU Humanities and Social Sciences Grant (PI: David Froc;2014-2015); $3,000.

Canada Research Chair Tier II: Lifespan cognition (2013-2018): $500,000.

Canada Foundation for Innovation: Lifespan cognition lab (2013-2018): $72,000.

PI: “Bernstein cognition lab student researcher conferences.” KPU Special Purpose Fund (2013): $1,900.

Co-Investigator: “Revelation effect: Theory and application.” KPU Humanities and Social Sciences Grant (PI: Andre Aßfalg; 2013-2014); $2,998.

PI: "A cognitive and perceptual investigation into right-of-way collisions between motorcycles and automobiles.”KPU Katalyst Grant (Co-Investigators: David Froc, Farhad Dastur; 2011-2012); $40,000.

Co-Investigator: “The power of the trivial: How do tangential photographs create immediate illusions of belief and memory?” Marsden Fund: Royal Society of New Zealand (PI: Maryanne Garry, Victoria University of Wellington, NZ; Co-Investigators: D.M. Bernstein; D.S. Lindsay; 2011-2013); $248,575.

PI: “The formation and consequences of false memory.” KPU; Chancellor’s Chair (Inaugural award;2010–2013); $45,000.

Co-Investigator: “Examining the role of autobiographical belief and alternate mechanisms in explaining the effect of suggesting childhood events on subsequent behaviour” Standard Research Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (PI: Alan Scoboria, University of Windsor; Co-Investigators: J. Jarry; G. Mazzoni; D.M. Bernstein; 2009–2012); $86,994.

PI: “Hindsight bias and theory of mind: Perspective taking across the lifespan.” Standard Research Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (2008-2011); $87,590.

Co-Investigator: “The heuristic basis of consumer choice and brand preferences” Standard Research Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (PI: Antonia Mantonakis, Brock University; Co-Investigators: A.McGill; P. Agarwall; J. Leboe; D.M. Bernstein; 2007-2010); $68,574.

Subcontract: “Visual Memory”; National Institute of Mental Health (PI: Geoffrey Loftus, University of Washington; 2006-2010); $53,377 USD total direct costs.

PI: “Hindsight bias and learning.” KPU Professional Development Grant (2007-2008); $18,000.

Subcontract: “The Life Center: Learning in Informal and Formal Environments”; National Science Foundation (multi-site project, parent site PI: John Bransford, University of Washington; 2006-2007); $9,547 USD total direct costs.

PI: “The consequences of false memory.” KPU Professional Development Grant (2006-2007): $25,000.

PI: KPU Minor Research and Scholarship Grant (2005, 2006, 2007): $5,000/yr.

PI: “When belief becomes false memory: A processing account.” Individual National Research Service Award, National Institute of Mental Health (2002-2004): $74,000 USD.

President’s Ph.D. Stipend: SFU (2001): $5,000.

PI: “Long-term neurocognitive consequences of mild traumatic brain injury.” Rick Hansen National Neurotrauma Initiative: Studentship (1998-1999): $20,000.

SFU Graduate Fellowship (1997, 1998, 2000): $5,000/yr.

M.D. Angus and Associates Graduate Fellowship in Psychology: SFU (1996): $150.

Sleep Research Society Trainee Fellowship (1994, 1995)

M.A. Defense Passed with Distinction: Brock University (1995)

Brock University Fellowship (1993, 1994)

Highest Honors in Sleep and Dream Studies: UC Berkeley (1990)

Publications (*denotes student or post-doc co-author when work was done)

In Press

Bernstein, D.M., *Coolin, A., *Fischer, A., Thornton, W.L., & Sommerville, J.A. (in press). False-belief reasoning from 3 to 92 years of age. PLOS ONE.

*Hunsche, M.C., *Mah, E., *Derksen, D.G., & Bernstein, D.M. (in press). Egocentrism. In Marc H. Bornstein, Martha E. Arterberry, Karen L. Fingerman, Jennifer E. Lansford (Eds.). The Sage Encyclopedia of Lifespan Human Development.

2017

*Aßfalg, A., Bernstein, D.M., & Hockley, W. (2017). The revelation effect: A meta-analytic test of hypotheses. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. doi:10.3758/s13423-017-1227-6

*Aßfalg, A., *Currie, D., & Bernstein, D.M. (2017). The revelation effect depends on task difficulty and placement. Memory & Cognition, 45, 664-676. doi:10.3758/s13421-016-0685-9

*Coolin A, *Fischer A.L., *Aßfalg A, Thornton W.L., Sommerville J.A., Bernstein D.M. (2017). Decomposing false-belief performance across the lifespan. In J.A. Sommerville &J. Decety (Eds.). Social Cognition: Development Across the Life Span (pp. 280-302). New York, NY: Routledge.

*Giroux, M.E., *Coburn, P.I., Connolly, D.A., & Bernstein, D.M. (2017). Perspective-taking abilities across the lifespan: A review of hindsight bias and theory of mind. In J.Weller and M. Toplak (Eds.). Individual Differences in Judgment and Decision Making from a Developmental Context. Hove, UK: Psychology Press (pp. 147-165).

Higham, P. A., *Neil, G. J., & Bernstein, D.M. (2017). Auditory hindsight bias: Fluency misattribution versus memory reconstruction. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 43, 1143-1159. Doi 10.1037/xhp0000405

Mahy, C.E.V., Bernstein, D.M., *Gerrard, L.D., & Atance, C.M (2017). Testing the validity of a continuous false belief task in three- to seven-year old children. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 160, 50-66. Doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2017.03.010

Pickrell, J.E., *McDonald, D.L.L., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2017). The misinformation effect. In R.F. Pohl (Ed.). Cognitive Illusions: Intriguing Phenomena in Thinking, Judgment, and Memory (2nd ed.). Hove, UK: Psychology Press (pp.406-423).

*Undorf, M., *Zimdahl, M.F., & Bernstein, D.M. (2017). Perceptual fluency affects judgments of learning when feelings of fluency are salient. Journal of Memory and Language, 92, 293-304.

2016

Begeer, S., Bernstein, D.M., *Aßfalg, A., *Azdad, H., *Glasbergen, T., *Wierda, M, & Koot, H.M. (2016). Equal egocentric bias in school-age children with and without Autism Spectrum Disorder. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 144, 15-26.doi:10.1016/j.jecp.2015.10.018

Bernstein, D., *Aßfalg A., *Kumar, R, & Ackerman, R. (2016). Looking backward and forward on hindsight bias. In J. Dunlosky and S.K. Tauber (Eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Metamemory (pp. 289-304). New York: Oxford University Press.

Bodner, G.E., Jamieson, R.K., *Cormack, D., *McDonald, D.L., & Bernstein, D.M. (2016). The production effect in recognition memory: Weakening strength can strengthen distinctiveness. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 70, 93-98.doi: 10.1037/cep0000082.

*Coolin, A., Erdfelder, E., Bernstein, D.M., Thornton, A.E., & Thornton, W.L. (2016). Inhibitory control underlies recollection and reconstruction processes in older adults’ hindsight judgments. Psychology & Aging, 31, 224-238.Doi: 10.1037/pag0000088.

*Caza, J.S., Atance, C.M., & Bernstein, D.M. (2016). Older (but not younger) preschoolers understand that knowledge differs between people and across time. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 34,313-324.DOI:10.1111/bjdp.12130

*Ghrear, S.E., Birch, S.A.J., & Bernstein, D.M. (2016). Outcome knowledge and false belief. Frontiers in Psychology, 7:118. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00118

*Giroux,M. E.,*Coburn,P. I.,Harley,E. M.,Connolly,D. A.Bernstein,D. M.(2016).Hindsight bias and law.Zeitschrift für Psychologie,224,190–203. doi:10.1027/2151-2604/a000253

2015

Bernstein, D.M., Scoboria, A., & Arnold, R. (2015). The consequences of suggesting false childhood food events. Acta Psychologica, 156, 1-7.

*Coburn, P., Bernstein, D.M., & Begeer, S. (2015). A new paper and pencil task reveals adult false belief reasoning bias. Psychological Research, 79, 739-49. doi: 10.1007/s00426-014-0606-0.

*Coolin, A., Erdfelder, E., Bernstein, D. M., Thornton, A. E., & Thornton, W. L. (2015). Explaining individual differences in cognitive functions underlying hindsight bias.Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 22, 328-348. DOI 10.3758/s13423-014-0691-5

*Newman, E.J., Garry, M., Unkelbach, C., Bernstein, D.M., Lindsay, D.S., & Nash, R. (2015). Truthiness and falsiness of trivia claims depend on judgmental contexts. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 41, 1337-1348.

2014

*Sager, B., *Yanko, M.R., Spalek, T.M., Froc, D.J., Bernstein, D.M., & Dastur, F.N. (2014). Motorcyclist’s lane-position as a factor in right-of-way violation collisions: A gap acceptance study. Accident Analysis Prevention, 72, 325-329.

*Coolin, A., Bernstein, D.M., Thornton, A.E., & Thornton, W.L. (2014). Inhibition and episodic memory impact age differences in hindsight bias.Experimental Aging Research, 40, 357-374.

*Fischer, A.L., Bernstein, D.M., & Loken Thornton, W. (2014). Elevated pulse pressure modifies theory of mind performance in older adults. The Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 69, 219-227.doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbs120

*Newman, E.J., *Sanson, M., *Miller, E.K., *Quigley-McBride, A., *Foster, J.L., Bernstein, D.M., & Garry, M. (2014). Names promote truthiness of claims. PLoS ONE 9(2): e88671. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0088671.

2013

Clifasefi, S.L, Bernstein, D.M., Mantonakis, A., & Loftus, E.F. (2013). Queasy does it: False alcohol memories lead to diminished alcohol preferences. Acta Psychologica. 143, 14-19.

Mantonakis, A., *Wudarzewski, A., Bernstein, D.M., Clifasefi, S., & Loftus, E.F. (2013). False memories can shape current consumption patterns. Psychology, 4, 302-308, DOI: 10.4236/psych.2013.43A044.

Sommerville, J.A., Bernstein, D.M., & Meltzoff, A.N. (2013). Measuring false belief in centimeters: Adults and children fail to suppress privileged knowledge on a novel change-of-location task. Child Development, 84, 1846-1854. DOI:10.1111/cdev.12110

2012

*Aßfalg, A., & Bernstein, D.M. (2012). Puzzles produce strangers: A puzzling result for revelation-effect theories. Journal of Memory and Language, 67, 86-92.

Begeer, S., Bernstein, D.M., *Wijhe, J.V., *Scheeren, A.M., & Koot, H.M. (2012). A continuous false belief task reveals egocentric biases in children and adolescents with autism. Autism, 16, 357-366.doi:10.1177/1362361311434545.

Bernstein, D.M., *Wilson, A.M., *Pernat, N., & *Meilleur, L. (2012). Auditory hindsight bias.Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 19, 588-593.doi: 10.3758/s13423-012-0268-0

*Newman, E., Garry, M., Bernstein, D.M., *Kantner, J., & Lindsay, D.S. (2012). Non-probative photos (or words) inflate truthiness. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 19, 969-974.doi: 10.3758/s13423-012-0292-0.

*Pernat, N., & Bernstein, D.M. (2012). The revelation effect. In N.M. Seel (Ed.). The encyclopedia of the sciences of learning. New York: Springer (pp. 2863-2865).

Scoboria, A., Mazzoni, G., Jarry, J., & Bernstein, D.M. (2012). Personalized, not general, suggestion affects false memory and suggestion-consistent behavior. Acta Psychologica, 139, 225-232. doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2011.10.008.

*Waubert de Puiseau, B., *Aßfalg, A., Erdfelder, E., & Bernstein, D.M. (2012). Extracting the truth from conflicting eyewitness reports: A formal modeling approach.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 18, 390-403. doi: 10.1037/a0029801

2011

Bernstein, D.M., Erdfelder, E., Meltzoff, A.N., Peria, W., & Loftus, G.R. (2011). Hindsight bias from 3 to 95 years of age. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 37, 378-391.doi: 10.1037/a0021971

Bernstein, D.M., *Pernat, N., & Loftus, E.F. (2011). The false memory diet: False memories alter food preference. In V.R. Preedy, R.R. Watson, & C.R. Martin (Eds.). Handbook of behavior, food, and nutrition. New York: Springer (pp. 1645-1663).

Bernstein, D.M., Thornton, W.L., & Sommerville, J.A. (2011). Theory of mind through the ages: Older and middle-aged adults exhibit more errors than do younger adults on a continuous false-belief task. Experimental Aging Research, 37, 481-502.

Mantonakis, A., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2011). Attributions of fluency: Familiarity, preference, and the senses. InP. A. Higham and J. Leboe (Eds.). Constructions of remembering and metacognition. Essays in honor of Bruce Whittlesea, Palgrave MacMillan (pp. 40-50).

Strange, D., Garry, M., Bernstein, D.M., & Lindsay, D.S. (2011). Photographs cause false memories for the news, Acta Psychologica, 136, 90-94. doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2010.10.006.

2010

Atance, C., Bernstein, D.M., & Meltzoff, A.N. (2010). Thinking about false belief: It’s not just what children say, but how long it takes them to say it. Cognition, 116, 297–301. doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2010.05.008.

Nourkova, V.V., & Bernstein, D.M. (2010). Why historical becomes personal: Spontaneous historical content of individual autobiographical memory. In Y.P. Zinchenko and V.F. Petrenko (Eds.). Psychology in Russia: State of the art. Scientific yearbook. Moscow: Lomonosov Moscow State University; Russian Psychological Society (pp. 257-277).

2009

Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2009). How to tell if a particular memory is true or false. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 4, 370-374.

Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2009). The consequences of false memory for food preferences and choices. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 4, 135-139.

Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2009). Memory distortion. In M.D. Binder, N. Hirokawa, & U. Windhorst (Eds). The encyclopedia of neuroscience. Springer-Verlag, GmbH Berlin Heidelberg (pp. 2325-2328). DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-29678-2_3415.

Bernstein, D.M., *Godfrey, R., & Loftus, E.F. (2009). Plausibility and autobiographical belief. In K.D. Markman, W.M.P. Klein, & J.A. Suhr (Eds.). The handbook of imagination and mental simulation. Psychology Press (pp. 89-112).

Bernstein, D.M., Rudd, M.E., Erdfelder, E., *Godfrey, R., & Loftus, E.F. (2009). The revelation effect for autobiographical memory: A mixture model analysis. Psychonomic Bulletin, & Review, 16, 463-468.

*Fayard, J.V., *Bassi, A.K., Bernstein, D.M., & Roberts, B.W. (2009). Is cleanliness next to godliness: Dispelling old wives’ tales: Failure to replicate Zhong & Liljenquist (2006). Journal of Articles in Support of the Null Hypothesis, 6, 21-30.

2008

Bernstein, D.M., Nourkova, V., & Loftus, E.F. (2008). From individual memories to oral history. In A.M. Colombus (Ed.). Advances in Psychology Research, 54, 157-181. Nova Science Publishers.

*Geraerts, E., Bernstein, D.M., Merckelbach, H., *Linders, C., *Raymaekers, L., & Loftus, E.F. (2008). Lasting false beliefs and their behavioral consequences. Psychological Science, 19, 749-753.

*Laney, C., *Bowman Fowler, N., *Nelson, K.J., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2008). The persistence of false beliefs. Acta Psychologica, 129, 190-197.

*Laney, C., *Kaasa, S.O., *Berkowitz, S.R., *Morris, E.K., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2008). The red herring technique: A methodological response to the problem of demand characteristics in false memory research. Psychological Research, 72, 362-375.

*Laney, C., *Morris, E.K., Bernstein, D.M., *Wakefield, B.M., & Loftus, E.F, (2008). Asparagus, a love story: Healthier eating could be just a false memory away. Experimental Psychology, 55, 291-300. DOI 10.1027/1618-3169.55.5.291

Nourkova, V.V., Bernstein, D.M. (2008). Imagination inflation after a change in linguistic context. In Y. P. Zinchenko and V.F. Petrenko (Eds.). Psychology in Russia: State of the art. Moscow, Department of Psychology, Moscow State University & IG-SOCIN (pp. 197-211).

2007

Bernstein, D.M., Atance, C., Meltzoff, A.N., & Loftus, G.R. (2007). Hindsight bias and developing theories of mind. Child Development, 78, 1374-1394.

Bernstein, D.M., & *Harley, E.M. (2007). Fluency misattribution and visual hindsight bias. Memory, 15, 548-560.

Birch, S.A.J., & Bernstein, D.M. (2007). What can children tell us about hindsight bias: A fundamental constraint on perspective taking? Social Cognition, 25, 98-113.

Garry, M., *Strange, D., Bernstein, D.M., & *Kinzett, T. (2007). Photographs can distort memory for the news. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 21, 995-1004.

2006

*Kronlund, A., & Bernstein, D.M. (2006). Unscrambling words increases brand name recognition and preference. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 20, 681-687.

*Morris, E.K., *Laney, C., Bernstein, D.M. & Loftus, E.F. (2006). How should we define susceptibility to false memories? American Journal of Psychology, 119, 255-274.

Nourkova, V.V., & Bernstein, D.M. (2006). New trends in the psychology of memory: On the problem of memory accuracy. B.S. Bratus, E.E. Sokolova (Eds.) Moscow State University. Department of General Psychology. Collection of works, Smysl Publishing House, Moscow (pp. 106-119, Published in Russian).

2005

Bernstein, D.M. (2005). Making sense of memory. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology, 59, 199-208.

Bernstein, D.M., *Laney, C., *Morris, E.K., & Loftus, E.F. (2005). False beliefs about fattening foods can have healthy consequences. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 102, 13724-13731. Published online Aug. 3. [featured in New York Times Magazine’s New Ideas of 2005, and Discover Magazine’s Top 100 Science News Stories of 2005].

Bernstein, D.M., *Laney, C., *Morris, E.K., & Loftus, E.F. (2005). False memories about food can produce food avoidance. Social Cognition, 23, 11-34.

Bernstein, D.M., Loftus, G.R. & Meltzoff, A. (2005). Object identification in preschool children and adults. Developmental Science, 8, 151-161.

Loftus, E.F. & Bernstein, D.M. (2005). Rich false memories: The royal road to success. In A. Healy (Ed). Experimental cognitive psychology and its applications: Festschrift in honor of Lyle Bourne, Walter Kintsch, and Thomas Landauer. Washington DC: American Psychological Association Press, pp. 101-113.

van de Wetering, S., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2005). Advertising as information or misinformation? Cognitive Technology, 10, 24-28.

2004

Bernstein, D.M., Atance, C., Loftus, G.R. & Meltzoff, A. (2004). We saw it all along: Visual hindsight bias in children and adults. Psychological Science, 15, 264-267.

Bernstein, D.M., *Godfrey, R., *Davison, A., & Loftus, E.F. (2004). Conditions affecting the revelation effect for autobiographical memory. Memory & Cognition, 32, 455-462.

Bernstein, D.M. & Loftus, E.F. (2004). False memories. In R. Gregory (Ed.). The Oxford companion to the mind. Oxford University Press, pp. 559-560.

Loftus, E.F., & Bernstein, D.M. (2004). Strong memories are made of this. Trends in Cognitive Science, 8, 199-201.

Nourkova, V.V., Bernstein, D.M. & Loftus, E.F. (2004). Altering traumatic memory. Cognition and Emotion. 18, 575-585.

Nourkova, V.V, Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2004). Biography becomes autobiography: Distorting the subjective past. American Journal of Psychology, 117, 65-80.

*Pickrell, J., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2004). The misinformation effect. In R. Pohl (Ed.). Cognitive illusions: A handbook on fallacies and biases in thinking, judgment and memory. Hove, UK: Psychology Press, pp. 345-361.

2003

Bernstein, D.M. & Loftus, E.F. (2003). Reconstructive memory. J.H. Byrne (Ed.). Learning and memory, 2nd edition (MacMillan Psychology Reference Series). New York: Macmillan, pp. 558-561.

Nourkova, V.V., Bernstein, D.M., & Loftus, E.F. (2003). Echo of explosions: Comparative analysis of the recollections about the terrorist attacks in 1999 (Moscow) and 2001 (New-York City). Psychological Journal, 24, 67-75. (Published in Russian).

van de Wetering, S., Bernstein, D.M. & Ley, R.G. (2003). Imagery, cerebral laterality and the healing process: A cautionary note. A. Sheikh (Ed.) Healing Images: The Role of Imagination in the Healing Process. Amityville: Baywood Publishing Company, pp. 72-90.

2002

Bernstein, D.M. (2002). Information processing difficulty long after self-reported concussion. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 8, 673-682.

Bernstein, D.M. & Loftus, E.F. (2002). Lingering difficulties distinguishing true and false memories: A comment on Shevrin’s psychoanalytic view of memory. Neuro-Psychoanalysis, 4, 139-141.

Bernstein, D.M., Whittlesea, B.W.A. & Loftus, E.F. (2002). Increasing confidence in remote autobiographical memory and general knowledge: Extensions of the revelation effect. Memory & Cognition, 30, 432-438.

van de Wetering, S., Bernstein, D.M. & Loftus, E.F. (2002). Public education against false memories: A modest proposal. Cognitive Technology, 2, 4-7.

2001

Gaetz, M. & Bernstein, D.M. (2001). The current status of electrophysiological procedures for the assessment of mild traumatic brain injury. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation, 16, 386-405.

Modigliani, V., Bernstein, D., & Govorkov, S. (2001). Size and attention in visual information processing, Acta Psychologica, 108, 35-51.

Segalowitz, S.J., Bernstein, D.M., & Lawson, S. (2001). P300 event-related potential decrements in well-functioning university students with mild head injury 6 years post-injury. Brain and Cognition, 45, 342-356.

1995-2000

Bernstein, D.M. & *De Ruiter, S.W. (2000). The effect of motivation on neurocognitive performance long after mild traumatic brain injury. Brain and Cognition, 44, 50–54.

Bernstein, D.M. (1999). Recovery from mild head injury. Brain Injury, 13, 151-172.

Segalowitz, S.J. & Bernstein, D. (1997). Neural networks and neuroscience: What are connectionist models good for? D. Johnson & C. Erneling (Eds.) The future of the cognitive revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 209-216.

Bernstein, D.M., & Belicki, K. (1995-1996). On the psychometric properties of dream content questionnaires. Imagination, Cognition and Personality, 15, 351-364.

Belicki, K. & Bernstein, D.M. (1995). Review of "Conquering bad dreams and nightmares" by B. Krakow and J. Niedhardt. Dreaming, 5, 121-125.

Bernstein, D.M., & Roberts, B.W. (1995). Assessing dreams through self-report questionnaires: Relations with past research and personality. Dreaming, 5, 13-27.

Non-Refereed Publications

Bernstein, D.M., & MacDonald, R. (May, 2012). Why people like (the taste of) different things. Muse Magazine, 24.

Bernstein, D.M. (2010). Hindsight bias and perspective taking across the lifespan. Synapse: Newsletter of the Kwantlen Psychology Department, 3, 30-32.

Bernstein, D.M. (1999). Conflicting evidence for complete recovery from mild head injury. Recovery, 9(4), 24.

Bernstein, D.M. (1997). Review of SFU’s Course Challenge Policy. Technical report.

Bernstein, D.M. (1996). Questionnaires and dream content: Can the former tell us anything useful about the latter? Association for the Study of Dreams Newsletter, 13, 14.

Bernstein, D.M. (1995). Just how valid and reliable is a dream content questionnaire? Association for the Study of Dreams Newsletter, 12, 15.