Refereed articles

2017

Celia B. Harris, Amanda J. Barnier, John Sutton, Paul G. Keil, and Roger A. Dixon. Going episodic: collaborative inhibition and facilitation when long-married couples remember together. Memory. Published online 10 January 2017

2016

Wayne Christensen, John Sutton, and Doris J.F. McIlwain. Cognition in skilled action: meshed control and the varieties of skill experience. Mind & Language 31 (1), 37-66. To be reprinted with a new introduction in Massimiliano L. Cappuccio (Ed.), The MIT Handbook of Embodied Cognition and Sport Psychology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, forthcoming late 2017.

Andrew Geeves, Doris J.F. McIlwain, and John Sutton. Seeing yellow: ‘connection’ and routine in professional musicians’ experience of music performance. Psychology of Music 44 (2), 183-201.

Aline Cordonnier, Amanda J. Barnier, and John Sutton. Scripts and information units in future planning: interactions between a past and a future planning task. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 69 (2), 324-338.

Sarah Pini, Doris J.F. McIlwain, and John Sutton. Re-tracing the encounter: interkinaesthetic forms of knowledge in Contact Improvisation. Antropologia e Teatro 7, 225-243.

2015

Wayne Christensen, John Sutton, and Doris J.F. McIlwain. Putting pressure on theories of choking: towards an expanded perspective on breakdown in skilled performance. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 14 (2), 253-293.

Wayne Christensen, Kath Bicknell, Doris J.F. McIlwain, and John Sutton. The sense of agency and its role in strategic control for expert mountain bikers. Psychology of Consciousness: theory, research, and practice 2 (3), 340-353.

Celia B. Harris, Akira O’Connor, & John Sutton. Cue generation and memory construction in direct and generative autobiographical memory retrieval. Consciousness & Cognition 33, 204-215.

Lucas M. Bietti and John Sutton. Interacting to remember at multiple timescales: coordination, collaboration, cooperation and culture in joint remembering. Interaction Studies 16 (3), 419-450.

2014

Celia B. Harris, Amanda J. Barnier, John Sutton, and Paul G. Keil. Couples as socially distributed cognitive systems: remembering in everyday social and material contexts. Memory Studies 7 (3), 285-297.

Andrew Geeves, Doris J.F. McIlwain, John Sutton, and Wayne Christensen. To think or not to think: the apparent paradox of expert skill in music performance. Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (6), 674-691. Reprinted in David Simpson & David Beckett (Eds.), Expertise, Pedagogy and Practice (pp. 111-128). London: Routledge, 2016.

Doris J.F. McIlwain and John Sutton. Yoga from the mat up: how words alight on bodies. Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (6), 655-673. Reprinted in David Simpson & David Beckett (Eds.), Expertise, Pedagogy and Practice (pp. 92-110). London: Routledge, 2016.

Andrew Geeves, Doris J.F. McIlwain, and John Sutton. The performative pleasure of imprecision: a diachronic study of entrainment in music performance. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8 (863) October (15 pages).

Andrew Geeves and John Sutton. Embodied cognition, perception, and performance in music. Empirical Musicology Review 9 (3/4), 247-253.

Lincoln J. Colling, William F. Thompson, and John Sutton. The effect of movement kinematics on predicting the timing of observed actions. Experimental Brain Research 232 (4), 1193-1206.

2013

John Sutton. Skill and collaboration in the evolution of human cognition. Biological Theory 8 (1), 28-36.

Kourken Michaelian and John Sutton. Distributed cognition and memory research: history and current directions. Review of Philosophy and Psychology 4 (1), 1-24.

Melanie Rosen and John Sutton. Self-representation and perspectives in dreams. Philosophy Compass 8 (11), 1041-1053 (video abstract).

Celia B. Harris, Amanda J. Barnier, and John Sutton. Shared encoding and the costs and benefits of collaborative recall. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 39 (1), 183-195.

Charles B. Stone, Amanda J. Barnier, John Sutton, and William Hirst. Forgetting our personal past: socially-shared retrieval-induced forgetting of autobiographical memories. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 42 (4), 1084-1099.

2012

Celia B. Harris, Amanda J. Barnier, and John Sutton. Consensus collaboration enhances group and individual recall accuracy. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 65 (1), 179-194.

John Sutton. Memory before the game: switching perspectives in imagining and remembering sport and movement. Journal of Mental Imagery 36 (1/2), 85-95.

Evelyn B. Tribble and John Sutton. Minds in and out of time: memory, embodied skill, anachronism, and performance. Textual Practice 26 (4), 587-607.

John Sutton and Evelyn B. Tribble. Materialists are not merchants of vanishing. Early Modern Culture: an electronic seminar 9 (online journal).

2011

John Sutton, Doris J.F. McIlwain, Wayne Christensen, and Andrew Geeves. Applying intelligence to the reflexes: embodied skills and habits between Dreyfus and Descartes. JBSP: Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 42 (1), 78-103.

John Sutton. Time, experience, and Descriptive Experience Sampling. Journal of Consciousness Studies 18 (1), 118-129.

Celia B. Harris, Paul G. Keil, John Sutton, Amanda J. Barnier, and Doris J.F. McIlwain. We remember, we forget: collaborative remembering in older couples. Discourse Processes 48 (4), 267-303.

Evelyn B. Tribble and John Sutton. Cognitive ecology as a framework for Shakespearean studies. Shakespeare Studies 39, 94-103.

2010

John Sutton. Observer perspective and acentred memory: some puzzles about point of view in personal memory. Philosophical Studies 148 (1), 27-37.

Max Coltheart, Peter Menzies, and John Sutton. Abductive inference and delusional belief. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry 15 (1), 261-287.

John Sutton, Celia B. Harris, Paul G. Keil, & Amanda J. Barnier. The psychology of memory, extended cognition, and socially distributed remembering. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 9 (4), 521-560.

Celia B. Harris, Amanda J. Barnier, John Sutton, and Paul G. Keil. ‘How did you feel when the Crocodile Hunter died?’: voicing and silencing in conversation influences memory for an autobiographical event. Memory 18 (2), 185-197.

Charles B. Stone, Amanda J. Barnier, John Sutton and William Hirst. Building consensus about the past: schema-consistency and convergence in socially-shared retrieval-induced forgetting. Memory 18 (2), 170-184.

2009

John Sutton and Carl Windhorst. Extended and constructive remembering: two notes on Martin and Deutscher. Crossroads: an interdisciplinary journal for the study of history, philosophy, religion, and classics 4 (1) [special issue on Max Deutscher’s work], 79-91.

2008

John Sutton. Between individual and collective memory: coordination, interaction, distribution. Social Research 75 (1), 23-48.

Amanda J. Barnier, John Sutton, Celia B. Harris, and Robert A. Wilson. A conceptual and empirical framework for the social distribution of cognition: the case of memory. Cognitive Systems Research 9 (1), 33-51.

2007

John Sutton. Batting, habit, and memory: the embodied mind and the nature of skill.  Sport in Society 10, 763-786. Reprinted in Robert Dale, Denis Burnham, & Catherine Stevens (Eds.), Human Communication Science: a compendium (pp. 473-495). Sydney: ARC Research Network in Human Communication Science, 2011.

2006

John Sutton. Distributed cognition: domains and dimensions. Pragmatics and Cognition, 14, 235-247. Reprinted in I. Dror & S. Harnad (Eds.), Cognition Distributed: how cognitive technology extends our minds (pp.45-56). Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2008.

2004

John Sutton. Representation, levels, and context in integrational linguistics and distributed cognition. Language Sciences, 26, 503-524.

2002

John Sutton. Cognitive conceptions of language and the development of autobiographical memory. Language and Communication 22, 375-390.