Department of Psychology  
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Ayanna Kim Thomas
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Department of Psychology
Tufts University
Psychology Building
Room 204
Medford, MA 02155

Lab website
Tel: 617-627-4559
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Assistant Professor of Psychology
Ph.D., University of Washington, 2001

Ayanna Thomas received her Ph.D. in cognitive psychology from the University of Washington. She then spent three years as an NIA postdoctoral fellow at Washington University, and one year as a research scientist, studying changes in long-term memory as a function of age. After teaching at Colby College for two years, Ayanna came to the Department of Psychology at Tufts University, where she established the Cognitive Aging and Memory lab in 2007. Ayanna's research examines the contextual cues that younger and older adults rely on when making decisions about memory and metamemory.

Graduate and Undergraduate students interested in working in the Cognitive Aging and Memory Lab should contact Ayanna at ayanna.thomas@tufts.edu.

Representative Publications

  • Thomas, A. K., Bulevich, J.B., & Dubois, S. (2011) The role of contextual information in episodic feeling of knowing. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory & Cognition, 38, 96 - 108.
  • Thomas, A.K., Bulevich, J. B. & Chan, J.C.K. (2010) Reducing retrieval enhanced suggestibility through warning. Journal of Memory & Language, 63, 149 - 157.
  • Chan, J. C. K., Thomas, A. K., & Bulevich, J. B. (2009). Recalling a witnessed event increases eyewitness suggestibility. Psychological Science, 20, 66-73.
  • Thomas, A. K. & McDaniel, M. A. (2007). The negative cascade of incongruent task-test processing in memory and metamemory. Memory & Cognition, 35, 668-678.
  • Thomas, A. K. & McDaniel, M. A. (2007). Metacomprehension for Educationally Relevant Materials: Dramatic Effects of Encoding-Retrieval Interactions. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 14, 212-218.
  • Thomas, A. K. and Bulevich, J. B. (2006). Effective Cue Utilization Reduces Memory Errors in Older Adults. Psychology & Aging, 21, 379-389.
  • Thomas, A. K., Hannula, D. E., and Loftus, E. F. (2006). How Self-Relevant Imagination Affects Memory for Behaviour? Applied Cognitive Psychology, 20, 1-18.
  • Thomas, A. K. and Sommers, M. S. (2005). Attention to Item-Specific Processing Eliminates Age Effects in False Memories. Journal of Memory & Language, 52, 71-86.
  • Thomas, A. K., Bulevich, J. B., and Loftus, E. F. (2003). Exploring the role of repetition and sensory elaboration in the imagination inflation effect. Memory & Cognition, 31, 630-640.
  • Berliner, L., Hyman, I., Thomas, A. K., and Fitzgerald, M. (2003). Children's memories for traumatic and positive experiences: Relationship to psychological symptoms. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 16, 229-236.
  • Thomas, A. K., and Loftus, E. F. (2002). Creating bizarre false memories through imagination. Memory & Cognition, 30, 423-431
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