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  1. Geoffrey Loftus (born December 24, 1945) is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Washington. He specializes in memory and attention, and his most recent research focuses on face perception and hindsight bias.

    • Employment
    • Awards and Honors
    • Professional Memberships
    • Other Professional Experience
    • Publications
    • Invited Addresses

    Warm-up

    Honeywell Corporation: computer programmer (machine-code and assembly-language), summers, 1966, 1967 Stanford University, Department of Psychology: research assistant/teaching assistant, 1967-1971 New York University: postdoctoral research fellow, 1971-72

    Permanent

    University of Washington: assistant,associate, full, emeritus professor, 1972-present

    Visiting

    Stanford University, Department of Psychology: visiting professor, summers, 1972, 1979 National Institutes of Health: National Institute on Aging: visiting scholar, autumn, 1986 MIT, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences: 1995-1996

    Fellowships

    University Fellow, Stanford University: 1967-70 NSF fellowship, New York University: 1971-72 Visiting Scholar, Stanford University: autumn, 1978, summers,1979, 1980

    American Association for the Advancement of Science (Fellow) American Psychological Society(Fellow) Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology Psychonomic Society(Publications Board 1997-2001) Society for Computers in Psychology(President 1983-84) Society of Experimental Psychologists

    Grant reviewing

    NIMHBasic Behavioral Processes Study Section (1983-1987) NIMHCognition and Perception Study Section (2003-2007) Adhoc reviewer for numerous other granting agencies in the U.S. and elsewhere

    Journal editorships

    Editor: Memory & Cognition(1993-1997) Associate Editor, Cognitive Psychology(1975-1996; 1999-2006)

    Journal editorial boards:

    JEP: Learning, Memory, and Cognition(1977-1988; 2000-2002) JEP: General (1977-1990) Psychological Science (1999-2004) Psychological Review(2004-2011)

    Books

    Loftus, G.R., & Loftus, E.F. (1976). Human Memory:The Processing of Information.Hillsdale,NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Loftus, G.R., & Loftus E.F. (1982). Essence ofStatistics. Monterey: Brooks-Cole. Loftus, G.R., & Loftus, E.F. (1983). Mind at Play:The Psychology of Video Games. New York:Basic Books. Loftus, G.R., & Loftus, E.F. (1987). Essence ofStatistics, 2nd Edition. New York: RandomHouse. Savageau, D. & Loftus, G.R. (1997). Places RatedAlmanac.New York: McMillan. Smith, E.E., Nolen-...

    Articles and Chapters

    Freund, R.D., Loftus, G.R., & Atkinson, R.C. (1969). Applications of multiprocess models for memory to continuous recognition tasks. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 6, 576-594. (pdf) Klatzky, R.L., & Loftus, G.R. (1969). Recognition memory as influenced by number of reinforcements and type of test. Psychonomic Science, 16, 302-303. (pdf) Loftus, G.R., & Wickens, T.D. (1970). Effect of incentive on storage and retrieval processes. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 85, 141-147. (pdf) Rund...

    • (206) 605-1974
    • (206) 605-1974
    • gloftus@uw.edu
    • gloftus45
  2. Psychology will be a much better science when we change the way we analyze data. GR Loftus. Current directions in psychological science 5 (6), 161-171. , 1996. 523. 1996. Eye fixations and recognition memory for pictures. GR Loftus. Cognitive psychology 3 (4), 525-551.

  3. Geoffrey R. Loftus. University of Washington. Department of Psychology, Box 351525. Guthrie Hall, Room 222. Seattle, WA 98195-1525. email: gloftus@uw.edu.

  4. Geoffrey Loftus is a former professor of psychology at the University of Washington, specializing in visual memory and perception. He has published several books and articles on topics such as face inversion, visual hindsight bias, and ambiguous figures.

  5. Geoffrey LOFTUS | Cited by 8,967 | of University of Washington Seattle, Seattle (UW) | Read 95 publications | Contact Geoffrey LOFTUS.

  6. 22. Feb. 2005 · FULL STORY. Geoffrey Loftus' latest research reads more like a murder mystery than a scientific paper. The University of Washington psychologist's new study opens with a savage beating and...