Outputs
Chapters
- Neurocomputational models of perceptual organization more
- Neurocomputational models of perceptual organization. In ’Unconscious memory representations in perception: Processes and mechanisms in the brain’ in the series ‘Advances in Consciousness’, Winkler, I. and Czigler, I., Eds. more
- Neurodynamical top-down processing during auditory attention more
- Neuroscience and Early Childhood Education more
- Never Seek to Tell Thy Love: E-Adapting Blake in the classroom. more
- New Corporate Responsibilities in the Digital Economy more
- New dimensions of the role of information systems: facilitating business collaboration in an electronic world more
- New era, new normal, new challenges: Managing crises and disasters at major and mega sport events more
- New focus of economic reactivation in Spain: creative industries in the Basque Country more
- New journalisms, new challenges more
- New journalisms, new pedagogies more
- New media development and strategies for sport mega-events: The Olympic Games and the Football World Cup more
- New observations on the interactions between evidence and the upper horizons of the soil more
- New tools, old tasks: Surveying with GPS in archaeology more
- News and free speech more
- News and the emotional public sphere more
- News journalism and public relations: a dangerous relationship more
- News narratives across borders: the convergence of interests and patterns of meaning in international media coverage of disaster more
- Niets zo praktisch als een goede theorie. Over oorzaken en verklaringen in de criminologie more
- No longer just making the tea: Media work placements and work-based learning in higher education more
- No More Heroes Any More: The Dangerous World of the Pop Culture Archaeologist more
- No small-talk in paradise: Why elysium fails the bechdel test, and why we should care more
- No Small-Talk in Paradise: Why Elysium Fails the Bechdel Test, and Why We Should Care more
- Nocebo phenomena: 'Negative non-specific effects' more
- Nocturnes, hope and ‘that croony nostalgia music’ more