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Chang, S. & Golomb, J. D. (2025). From the eye to the world: Spatial suppression is primarily coded in retinotopic coordinates but can be learned in spatiotopic coordinates. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 1-16. [pdf]
Chang, S., Dube, B., Golomb, J. D., & Leber, A. B. (2023). Learned spatial suppression is not always proactive. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 49(7), 1031–1041. [pdf]
Hamblin-Frohman, Z., Chang, S., Egeth, H., & Becker, S. I. (2022). Eye movements reveal the contributions of early and late processes of enhancement and suppression to the guidance of visual search. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 84(6), 1913-1924. [pdf]
Chang, S., Niebur, E., & Egeth, H. E. (2021). Standing out in a small crowd: The role of display size in attracting attention. Visual Cognition, 29(9), 587-591. [pdf]
Chang, S. & Egeth, H. E. (2021). Can salient stimuli really be suppressed?. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 83(1), 260-269. [pdf]
Chang, S. & Egeth, H. E. (2019). Enhancement and suppression flexibly guide attention, Psychological Science, 30(12), 1724-1732. [pdf]
Chang, S., Cunningham, C. A., & Egeth, H. E. (2019). The power of negative thinking: Paradoxical but effective ignoring of salient-but-irrelevant stimuli by a spatial cue, Visual Cognition, 27(3-4), 199-213. [pdf]
Chang, S., Kim, C. Y., & Cho, Y. S. (2017). Sequential effects in preference decision: Prior preference assimilates current preference. PLoS one, 12(8), e0182442. [pdf]
Shin, J. C., Chang, S., & Cho, Y. S. (2015). Adjustment to subtle time constraints and power law learning in rapid serial visual presentation. Frontiers in Psychology, 6, 1748. [pdf]
Chang, S., & Cho, Y. S. (2015). Polarity correspondence effect between loudness and lateralized response set. Frontiers in Psychology, 6, 683. [pdf]