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Dive into the research topics where Deborah Bell is active.

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Featured researches published by Deborah Bell.


Memory | 2006

Two types of recollection-based monitoring in younger and older adults: Recall-to-reject and the distinctiveness heuristic

David A. Gallo; Deborah Bell; Jonathan S. Beier; Daniel L. Schacter

People often use recollection to avoid false memories. At least two types of recollection-based monitoring processes can be identified in the literature. Recall-to-reject is based on the recall of logically inconsistent information (which disqualifies the false event from having occurred), whereas the distinctiveness heuristic is based on the failure to recall to-be-expected information (which is diagnostic of non-occurrence). We attempted to investigate these hypothetical monitoring processes in a single task, as a first step at delineating the functional relationship between them. By design, participants could reject familiar lures by (1) recalling them from a to-be-excluded list (recall-to-reject) or (2) realising the absence of expected picture recollections (the distinctiveness heuristic). Both manipulations reduced false recognition in young adults, suggesting that these two types of monitoring were deployed on the same test. In contrast, older adults had limited success in reducing false recognition with either manipulation, indicating deficits in recollection-based monitoring processes. Depending on how a retrieval task is structured, attempts to use one monitoring process might interfere with another, especially in older adults.


Psychology and Aging | 2004

Specific- and Partial-Source Memory: Effects of Aging.

Jon S. Simons; Chad S. Dodson; Deborah Bell; Daniel L. Schacter

Normal aging can be associated with impairments in source memory (recollecting an events context). This study examined the effects of aging on specific-source memory (e.g., remembering which of 4 people spoke a word) and partial-source memory (e.g., remembering the gender of the person who spoke the word). When young and older adults were matched in terms of old-new recognition, age-related deficits were observed on both specific- and partial-source recollection. When the groups were matched on partial-source performance, no disproportionate specific-source impairment was seen. The results suggest that aging does not differentially affect specific- versus partial-source memory.


European Journal of Cognitive Psychology | 2004

Brain rCBF and performance in visual imagery tasks: Common and distinct processes

Stephen M. Kosslyn; William F. Thompson; Jennifer M. Shephard; Giorgio Ganis; Deborah Bell; Judith H. Danovitch; Leah A. Wittenberg; Nathaniel M. Alpert

The present study was designed to discover whether variations in normalised regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in different brain areas predict variations in performance of different imagery tasks. Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to assess brain activity as 16 participants performed four imagery tasks. These tasks were designed so that performance was particularly sensitive to the participants ability to form images with high resolution, to generate images from distinct segments, to parse imaged forms into parts while inspecting them, or to transform (rotate) images. Response times and error rates were recorded. Multiple regression analyses revealed that variations in most brain areas predicted variations in performance of only one task, thus demonstrating that the four tasks tap largely independent imagery processes. However, we also found that some underlying processes were recruited by more than one task, particularly those implemented in the occipito‐parietal sulcus, the medial frontal cortex, and Area 18.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 2005

Ovarian cancer is a heterogeneous disease.

Vivian W. Wang; Cheng Li; Ming Lin; William R. Welch; Deborah Bell; Yuk Fu Wong; Ross S. Berkowitz; Samuel C. Mok; Christina A. Bandera


Harvard Business Review | 2013

Dysfunction in the Boardroom

Boris Groysberg; Deborah Bell


Archive | 2013

Dysfunction in the Boardroom - Understanding the persistent gender gap at the highest levels

Boris Groysberg; Deborah Bell


Harvard Business Review | 2014

Should a female director "tone it down"?

Boris Groysberg; Deborah Bell; Ilene S. Gordon; Sue Decker


Archive | 2013

Beth Stewart: Navigating the Boardroom

Boris Groysberg; Deborah Bell


Archive | 2011

Rebecca S. Halstead: Steadfast Leadership

Boris Groysberg; Deborah Bell


Archive | 2009

Barbara Norris: Leading Change in the General Surgery Unit

Boris Groysberg; Nitin Nohria; Deborah Bell

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Ross S. Berkowitz

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Samuel C. Mok

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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William R. Welch

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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