1. The role of working memory in long-term learning: Implications for childhood development Alicia Forsberg, Eryn J. Adams, and Nelson Cowan 2. Learning to control tinnitus Fatima T. Husain 3. The attentional demands of combining comprehension and production in conversation Suzanne Rosa Jongman 4. More than "just a test-Task-switching paradigms offer an early warning system for cognitive decline Frini Karayanidis and Montana McKewen 5. Policy compression: An information bottleneck in action selection Lucy Lai and Samuel J. Gershman 6. Limited evidence for probability matching as a strategy in probability learning tasks Jessica L. Montag 7. A review of uncertainty visualization errors: Working memory as an explanatory theory Lace Padilla, Spencer C. Castro, and Helia Hosseinpour
Kara D. Federmeier received her Ph.D. in Cognitive Science from the University of California, San Diego. She is a Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Neuroscience Program at the University of Illinois and a full-time faculty member at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, where she leads the Illinois Language and Literacy Initiative and heads the Cognition and Brain Lab. She is also a Past President of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Her research examines meaning comprehension and memory using human electrophysiological techniques, in combination with behavioral, eyetracking, and other functional imaging and psychophysiological methods. She has been funded by the National Institute on Aging, the Institute of Education Sciences, and the James S. McDonnell Foundation.