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Hansen, Joe B. – 1972
Ninety-eight undergraduate education majors received a battery of ability tests, measuring general reasoning, associative memory, and trait anxiety and were randomly assigned to three groups--no feedback, feedback, and learner control--for a computer-assisted instruction course on Xenograde systems (an imaginary science). Four state anxiety…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Computer Assisted Instruction
Peer reviewedDever, R. B. – Exceptional Children, 1978
Discussed is the process of hierarchical task analysis (a tool used to decide what to teach and when to teach it) as it relates to the setting of instructional goals and objectives. (BD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Instructional Design
Peer reviewedShuart, Viola E.; Lewko, John H. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1988
Explores content or contextual validity of social rule classifications produced by sample of 12-year-old child coders. Analyses of variances revealed that categorization schemes generated by child coders were contextually valid as determined by raters' mean ratings. (Author/RWB)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, College Freshmen
Peer reviewedAlexander, Patricia A. – Reading Research and Instruction, 1986
Examines the effects of specific task-related information on undergraduates' studying behaviors and question-answering performance and indicates that specific postreading response criteria significantly improved the question-answering performance of readers.(DF)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBart, William M.; Mertens, Donna M. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1979
The hierarchical structure of the formal operational period of Piaget's theory of cognitive development was explored through the application of ordering theoretical methods to a set of data that systematically utilized the various formal operational schemes. Results suggested a common structure underlying task performance. (Author/BH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Tasks, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedBart, William M.; And Others – Child Study Journal, 1979
Five Inhelder-Piaget formal operations tasks were analyzed to determine the extent that the formal operational skills they assess were ordered into a stable hierarchy generalizable across samples of subjects. Subjects were 34 collegiate gymnasts (19 males, 15 females), and 22 students (1 male, 21 females) from a university nursing program.…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Peer reviewedSegalowitz, Norman S.; Segalowitz, Sidney J. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1993
Practice on cognitive tasks, such as word recognition tasks, will usually lead to faster and more stable responding in a second language. An analysis is presented of the relationship between observed reductions in performance latency and latency variability with respect to whether processing has become faster or whether a qualitative change, such…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, English (Second Language), Language Research
Peer reviewedRoth, Daniel; Leslie, Alan M. – Cognition, 1998
Two experiments related structure of a task to underlying cognitive mechanisms. Found that 3-year olds were no better at predicting behavior from partially true beliefs than from entirely false beliefs. Three- and 4-year olds, and autistic children had distinct performance profiles across tasks. Concluded that conceptual foundations for a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Autism, Beliefs
Peer reviewedHulstijn, Jan; Laufer, Batia – Language Learning, 2001
English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) learners in two countries participated in two parallel experiments testing whether retention of vocabulary acquired incidentally is contingent on amount of task-induced involvement. Results are discussed in light of the construct of task-induced involvement. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedBialystok, Ellen; Miller, Barry – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 1999
A grammaticality judgment test based on five structures of English grammar was administered in oral and written form. Two groups were formed by separating participants who began learning English at younger and older than 15 years of age. Performance patterns were different for the two groups, the linguistic structure tested affected participants'…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Bilingualism, Cognitive Processes, Grammar
Verbal and Spatial Information Processing Constraints in Children with Specific Language Impairment.
Peer reviewedHoffman, LaVae M.; Gillam, Ronald B. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
A dual-processing paradigm was used to investigate information processing limitations underlying specific language impairment (SLI). School-age children with and without SLI were asked to recall verbal and spatial stimuli in situations that varied the number of tasks that were required and the speed at which stimuli were presented. Children…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Spatial Ability, Language Acquisition, Cognitive Processes
Lohmann, Heidemarie; Carpenter, Malinda; Call, Josep – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2005
Three- and 4-year-old children were tested using videos of puppets in various versions of a theory of mind change-of-location situation, in order to answer several questions about what children are doing when they pass false belief tests. To investigate whether children were guessing or confidently choosing their answer to the test question, a…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Video Technology, Guessing (Tests), Preschool Children
Juhasz, Barbara J. – Psychological Bulletin, 2005
Words and pictures with earlier learned labels are processed faster than words and pictures with later learned labels. This age-of-acquisition (AoA) effect has been extensively investigated in many different types of tasks. This article provides a review of these studies including picture naming, word naming, speeded word naming, word…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Pictorial Stimuli, Eye Movements, Age Differences
Gilabert, Roger – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2007
This paper analyses the effects of manipulating the cognitive complexity of L2 oral tasks on language production. It specifically focuses on self-repairs, which are taken as a measure of accuracy since they denote both attention to form and an attempt at being accurate. By means of a repeated measures design, 42 lower-intermediate students were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Oral Language, Second Language Learning, Difficulty Level
Algarabel, Salvador; Luciano, Juan V.; Martinez, Jose L. – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2006
Anderson & Green (2001) have recently shown that using an adaptation of the go-no go task, participants can voluntarily inhibit the retrieval of specific memories. We present three experiments in which we try to determine the degree of automaticity involved, and the role of the previous prime-target relation on the development of this inhibitory…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Reaction Time, Inhibition, Memory

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