Publications
Reed, C.L.,
& McIntosh, D.N. (in press). The social dance: On-line body perception in the
context of others. In R.L. Klatzky, Behrmann, M., & MacWhinney, B. (eds.),
Embodiment, Ego-Space, and Action: 34th Carnegie Symposium on
Cognition.
Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Bosbach, S, Knoblich, G., Reed, C.L., & Prinz, W.
(in press). Body inversion effect without body sense: insights from
deafferentation. Neuropsychologia.
Reed, C.L., Beall, P.M., Stone, V.E., Kopelioff,
L., Pulham, D., & Hepburn, S.L. (2006). Perception of body postures: What
individuals with autism may be missing. Journal of Autism & Developmental
Disorders. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10803-006-0220-0. (pdf)
Reed, C.L.,
Grubb, J.D., & Steele, C.
(2006). Grasping attention: the effects of hand proximity on visual covert
orienting. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception &
Performance, 32, 166-177.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L., Stone, V.E., Grubb, J.D., &
McGoldrick, J.E. (2006). Turning configural processing upside down: Part- and
whole body postures. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception &
Performance, 32, 73-87. (pdf)
Reed, C.L., Klatzky, R., & Halgren, E. (2005).
What versus where for haptic object recognition: an fMRI study. Neuroimage,
25, 718-726. (pdf)
Reed, C.L., Stone, V.E., & McGoldrick, J.E. (2005). Not just
posturing: Configural processing of the human body. In W. Prinz, M. Shiffrar,
I. Thornton, G. Knoblich, & M. Grosjean (eds.), The Human Body: From the
Inside Out (pp. 229-258). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. (may be
available via Amazon or publisher for download)
Reed, C.L.,
Grubb, J., & Winkielman, P. (2004). Emulation theory offers conceptual gains
but needs filters. Brain and Behavioral Sciences, 27, 411-412.
(pdf)
Slaughter, V., Stone, V.E., & Reed, C.L. (2004).
Perception of faces and bodies: similar
or different? Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13, 219-223. (pdf)
Reed, C.L.,
Halgren, E., & Shoham, S. (2004). The neural substrates of tactile object
recognition: an fMRI study. Human Brain Mapping, 21, 236-246.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L.,
McGoldrick, J.E., Shackelford, R., & Fidopiastis, C. (2004). Are human bodies
represented differently from other animate and inanimate objects? Visual
Cognition, 11, 523-550.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L.,
Stone, V., Bozova, S., & Tanaka, J. (2003). The body inversion effect.
Psychological Science, 14, 302-308.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L. (2002). Chronometric comparisons of
imagery to action: Visualizing vs. physically performing springboard dives.
Memory & Cognition, 30, 1169-1178.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L. (2002). What is the body schema? In W. Prinz and A.
Meltzoff (eds.), The Imitative Mind: Development, Evolution, and Brain Bases
(pp. 233-243). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Vinson, N. G., & Reed, C. L. (2002). Sources of
object-specific effects in representational momentum. Visual Cognition, 9,
41-65. (pdf)
Grubb, JD & Reed, CL. (2002). Trunk Orientation
Induces Neglect-like performance in intact individuals.
Psychological Science,
13,
554-557.
(pdf)
Polk, T., Reed, C.L., Keenan, J., Hogarth, P., & Anderson, C.A. (2001).
A dissociation between symbolic number knowledge and analogue magnitude
information. Brain and Cognition, 47, 545-563.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L., & Franks, I.M. (1998). Motor
preprogramming and on-line control in patients differentially affected with
Parkinson’s disease. Cognitive Neuropsychology: Special issue on Perception
and Action, 15, 723-745.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L., Caselli, R.J, & Farah, M.J. (1996).
Tactile agnosia: underlying impairment and implications for normal tactile
object recognition. Brain, 119, 875-888.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L., & Vinson, N.G. (1996). Conceptual
effects on representational momentum. Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Human Perception and Performance, 22, 839-850.
(pdf)
Reed, C.L.,
& Farah, M.J. (1995). The psychological reality of the body schema: A test with
normal participants. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception
and Performance, 21, 334-343. (pdf)
Reed, C.L.
(1994). Perceptual dependence between
shape and texture in planar and three-dimensional stimuli during haptic
processing. Perception, 23, 349-366.
(abstract)
Reed, C.L., & Caselli, R.J. (1994). The nature
of tactile agnosia: A case study. Neuropsychologia, 32, 527-539. (pdf)
Lederman, S.J.,
Klatzky, R.L., & Reed, C.L. (1993). Constraints on haptic integration of
spatially shared object dimensions. Perception, 22, 723-743.
(abstract)
Reed, C.L., Lederman, S.J., & Klatzky, R.L. (1990). Haptic integration
of planar size with texture, hardness, and planar contour. Canadian Journal
of Psychology, 44, 522-545.
Klatzky, R.L., Lederman, S.J., & Reed, C.L.
(1989). Haptic integration of object properties: Texture, hardness, and planar
contour. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and
Performance, 15, 45-57.
(pdf)
Klatzky, R.L., Lederman, S.J., & Reed, C.L.
(1987). There’s more to touch than meets the eye: The salience of object
attributes for haptics with and without vision. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: General, 116, 356-369.
(pdf)