David Lane

 

David Lane Profile Pic









  E-mail: david.lane@kwantlen.ca
  Phone: 604-599-2222     Voicemail: 9463
  Office Location: Richmond - 2402

List of courses taught:

  • PSYC 1200 - Introduction to Psychology: Areas and Applications
  • PSYC 2385 - Cognition 


Areas of Interest & Investigation: My central area of interest is human memory, and especially false memory. I have taught courses in introductory psychology, cognition, memory, research methods and in advanced cognitive neuroscience. I am interested in psychology and the law and basic cognitive processes and how they may inform applied psychology.


Educational background: B.A.(Hons) (U. Saskatchewan), Ph.D. (U. Saskatchewan)



Selected References (Talks, Posters and Research Papers):


Marche, T. A., Brainerd, C. J., Reyna, V. F. & Lane, D. G. (2010). Measuring age differences in true and phantom recollection with fuzzy-trace theory’s dual recall model. Poster presented at the 50th annual meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Boston, MA, USA.


Marche, T. A., Howe, M. L., Lane, D. G. , Owre, K. P. & Briere, J. L. (2009). Invariance of cognitive triage in the development of recall in adulthood. Memory, 17, 518 - 527.


*Marche, T. A., Brainerd, C. J., Lane, D. G., & Loehr, J. D. (2005). Item method directed forgetting diminishes false memory. Memory, 13, 749 - 758.


Lane, D. G. & Marche, T. A. (2005). Dissociable serial position effects for acoustic and semantic false recall. A talk given at the 15th annual meeting of the Canadian Society for Brain, Behaviour and Cognitive Sciences (BBCS), Montreal, Canada.


Lane, D. G. & Marche, T. A. (2005). False recall serial position effects: The impact of presentation rate, delayed recall, and concurrent task demand. Poster presented at the Banff Annual Seminar in Cognitive Science (BASICS), Banff, AB, Canada.


Lane, D. G. & Marche, T. A. (2002). The influence of serial position of false memory. Poster presented to the 12th annual meeting of the Canadian Society for Brain, Behaviour and Cognitive Sciences (BBCS), Vancouver, BC, Canada.


Lane, D. G. & Marche, T. A. (In preparation). False recall serial position effects.


Fitch, V. & Lane, D. G. (In preparation). Implementation Intensions: Improving Prospective Memory When the Cue is Not So Obvious.