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Peer reviewedLorsbach, Thomas C.; Reimer, Jason F. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
In a study of developmental differences in ability to suppress irrelevant information in working memory, children and adults provided endings for sentences that constrained a terminal noun. Responses to critical sentences were disconfirmed with unexpected endings. On another sentence-completion task with disconfirmed nouns, children showed priming…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Processes, Inhibition
Peer reviewedOberauer, Klaus; Suss, Heinz-Martin; Wilhelm, Oliver; Wittman, Werner W. – Intelligence, 2003
Tested 133 college students in Germany with new tasks and 6 working memory marker tasks. Results reveal three working memory functions: simultaneous storage and processing; supervision; and coordination of elements into structures. Each function could be subdivided into distinct components of variance. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBaddeley, Alan – Psychological Review, 1994
George A. Miller's essay gives a clear account of information theory and demonstrates how the concept of limited channel capacity can be applied across sensory dimensions. Its major influence has been demonstrating that immediate memory span is relatively insensitive to the amount of information per item. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Information Theory, Information Utilization, Memory
Peer reviewedNaito, Mika – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1990
Three experiments involving children and adults investigated age differences in repetition priming effects as contrasted with explicit recall and recognition. Findings showed that recall increased with age, but priming effects did not differ with age. Results suggest that implicit memory is insensitive to age differences and to encoding and delay…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedNurius, Paula S. – Social Work, 1994
Draws on architecture and operation of human memory to better specify self-concept form and functioning. Translates these major components and processes of memory system into practice implications for targets and methods of change: declarative knowledge versus procedural knowledge, storage memory versus working memory, and role of sensory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Information Processing, Memory, Self Concept
Peer reviewedMearns, Jack; Lees-Haley, Paul R. – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1993
Alcohol abuse is linked strongly with neuropsychological deficits that may resemble deficits seen in head-injured individuals. Heavy daily drinking appears more damaging than episodic abusive consumption. Cognitive deficits associated with alcohol include abstraction, perceptuospatial, and problem-solving skills. For alcoholics younger than 40,…
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Alcoholism, Cognitive Processes, Drinking
Peer reviewedWeingartner, Herbert J.; And Others – Gerontologist, 1993
Contrasts changes in semantic memory in elderly normal controls and Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients before patients expressed symptoms. Found that controls generated more uncommon exemplars from closed semantic categories (fruits and vegetables) than did AD patients prior to presumed onset of AD. AD patients were just as productive as controls…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Alzheimers Disease, Cognitive Processes, Memory
Peer reviewedWyer, Robert S., Jr.; Radvansky, Gabriel A. – Psychological Review, 1999
Proposes a theory of social cognition to account for the comprehension and verification of social information. The theory views comprehension as a process of constructing situation models of new information on the basis of previously formed models about its referents. The comprehension of both single statements and multiple pieces of information…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Models, Nonverbal Learning
Peer reviewedDougherty, Michael R. P.; Gettys, Charles F.; Ogden, Eve E. – Psychological Review, 1999
Describes a new theory of likelihood judgments based on D. L. Hintzman's (1984, 1988) MINERVA2 memory model. The model, MINERVA-DM (decision making), accounts for a wide range of likelihood-judgment phenomena. Extends the model to expert-probability judgment and shows how MINERVA-DM can account for both good and poor calibration (overconfidence)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Decision Making, Heuristics, Mathematical Models
Peer reviewedWray, Alison; Perkins, Michael R. – Language & Communication, 2000
Proposes a model to account for the uses to which the individual puts formulaic language, and specifically, what determines the choice for that person of a holistic or analytic processing strategy at any given moment. Formulaic language is used to describe a phenomenon that encompasses various types of wordstrings that appear to be stored and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Interaction, Language Processing, Memory
Peer reviewedRansdell, Sarah; Arecco, M. Rosario; Levy, C. Michael – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2001
Discusses two experiments: the first examining multilinguals ability to maintain native language writing quality and fluency in the presence of unattended irrelevant speech while maintaining a concurrent 6-digit memory load; the second in which bilinguals reduced fluency during writing with a six-digit load only. Results are interpreted in terms…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Cognitive Processes, Language Fluency, Memory
Development of Working Memory: Should the Pascual-Leone and the Baddeley and Hitch Models Be Merged?
Peer reviewedBaddeley, Alan D.; Hitch, Graham J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2000
Maintains that recent elaborations of the Baddeley and Hitch working memory model offer a better account of processes underlying cognitive development than that by existing neo-Piagetian interpretations. Argues that the episodic buffer, newly added to the model, offers a way of dealing with more complex cognitive activities. Suggests that attempts…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Memory
Peer reviewedRobertson, Cathy; Kirsner, Kim – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2000
This study confirmed the following: Fowler's (1989) finding that duration is reduced for repeated words that involve Given information; evidence that Given repetitions are restricted to intra-topic discourse; evidence that duration is increased for new repetitions under intra-topic conditions; and evidence for shortening and lengthening are…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Cognitive Processes, Language Fluency, Memory
Peer reviewedUllman, Michael T. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2001
Discusses theoretical and empirical aspects of the neural bases of the mental lexicon and the mental grammar in the first and second language (L1 and L2). Argues that in the first language, the learning, representation, and processing of lexicon and grammar depend on two well-studies brain memory systems. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Grammar
Peer reviewedRuffman, Ted; Rustin, Charlotte; Garnham, Wendy; Parkin, Alan J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Examined source monitoring and false memories in 6-, 8-, and 10-year-olds related to their memory of information presented by videotape and/or audiotape. Found that certainty rating revealed deficits in children's understanding of when they had erred on source questions and when they had made false alarms. Inhibitory ability accounted for unique…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes


