Tor Endestad's publications PDF Print E-mail

Endestad, T. & Magnussen, S. (2001). Metaphor induced false memory for pictures. Proceedings of the first expert meeting of cognition, Cypros.
Endestad, T.(2001) Stress and mastery of technology changes. Proceedings of the 9th Human-Computer Interaction conference, Luisianna, USA.
Endestad, T. (2002). Cognitive mechanisms in the comprehension of metaphor. Doctoral thesis. University of Oslo
Torgersen, L. & Endestad, T. (2003). Computer games and violence: are there really a connection. Proceedings of DIGRA.
Endestad, T., Brandzæg, P.B., Heim, J., Kaare, B., & Torgersen, L. (2004). En digital barndom: En spørreundersøkelse om barns bruk av medieteknologi. Nova Rapport.
Endestad, T., Helstrup, T., & Magnussen, S. (2004). Source memory for pictures and words following literal and metaphorical decisions. Imagination, Cognition and Personality, 23(2&3), 209-2016.
Brandtzæg, P.B., Endestad, T., Heim, J. Kaare, B.H., & Torgersen, L. (2004). Barn i et digitalt samfunn: En beskrivelse av norske barn fra 7 til 12 år og deres tilgang til og bruk av TV, PC, Internett, mobiltelefon og spillteknologier. Barn, 4, 9-31.
Endestad, T. (2004). Metaphors and memory: to reconstruct a dinosaur.. In Synergies. Oslo: Centre for Advanced Study.
Heim, J., Brandtzæg, P.B., Kaare, B.H., Endestad, T. & Torgersen, L.(2005). Children’s Usage of Media Technologies and Psychosocial Factors. New Media & Society.
Karlsen, P., Johannessen, I.K. Endestad, T., & Lian, A. (2005) Why does the phonological similarity effect reverse with nonwords. Psychological Research.
Kaare, B.H., Brandtzæg, P.B., Endestad, T., & Heim, J. (2007). In the Borderland Between Family Orientation and Peer-Culture: The Use of Communication Technologies among Norwegian Tweens. New Media & Society. Vol9(4):603–624.
Heim, J., Brandtzæg P. B., Endestad, T., Kaare, B. H., & Torgersen, L. (2007). Childrens use of Media Technologies and Psychosocial Factors. Journal: New Media & Society 2006.
Magnussen, S., Endestad, T., Koriat, A., & Helstrup, T. (2007). What do people believe about memory and how do they talk about memory. In T. Helstrup & S. Magnussen (eds.) Everyday Memory. Psychology Press
Goodman, G.S., Magnussen, S., Andersson, J., Endestad, T., Løkken, L. & Moestue, A.C. (2007). Memory illusions and false memories in the real world. In T. Helstrup & S. Magnussen (eds.) Everyday Memory. Psychology Press
Magnussen, S, Andersson, J., Cornoldi, C., DeBeni, R., Endestad,T., Goodman, G.S., Helstrup, T., Koriat,A., Larsson, M., Melinder, A., Nilsson, L.G., Rönnberg, J. & Zimmer, H. (2006) What people believe about memory. Memory. Psychology Press, 14(5), 595-613.
Melinder, A., Endestad, T., & Magnussen, S. (2006). Relations between episodic memory, suggestibility, theory of mind, and cognitive inhibition in the preschool child. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology.
Espeseth, T., Rootwelt, H., Endestad, T., & Reinvang. I (2007) Nicotine receptor gene CHRNA4 modulates early event-related potentials in auditory and visual oddball target detection tasks. Accepted for publication in Neuroscience.
Rothmayr, C., Baumann, O., Endestad, T., Rutschmann, R.M., Magnussen, S. & Greenlee, M.W. (2008).  Dissociation between neural correlates of verbal and non-verbal visual working memory with different delays. Behavioral and Brain Function, in press

Goodman, G.S., Magnussen, S., Andersson, J., Endestad, T., Løkken, L. & Mostue, C. (2007).  Memory illusions and false memories in real life.  In  S. Magnussen & T. Helstrup  (Eds),  Everyday memory. UK, Psychology Press.

Magnussen, S., Greenlee, M.W., Baumann, O. & Endestad, T.  (2008). Visual perceptual memory – anno 2008.  In  L. Bäckman & L. Nyberg (Eds). Memory, ageing and the brain. Hove, UK. Psychology Press, in press

Submitted
Endestad, T., Korsnes, M.S., Magnussen, S., Vogt, S., Bjørnerud, A. & Due Tønnesen, P. (submitted). Hemispheric asymmetry in processing faces and objects. An fMRI study.

Baumann, O., Endestad, T., Magnussen, S. & Greenlee, M.W. (submitted).  Delayed discrimination of spatial frequency: Behavioral and fMRI evidence for  early, low-level perceptual memory mechanisms in vision.