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Millward, Claire; Powell, Stuart; Messer, David; Jordan, Rita – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2000
This paper reports on two studies that compared the memory of children with autism for personally experienced events with that of memory for events experienced by a peer. The children with autism recalled events performed by themselves significantly less well than observed events performed by a peer. The opposite was true for typical children and…
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Cognitive Processes, Experiential Learning
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Aylward, Glen P.; Gordon, Michael; Verhulst, Steven J. – Assessment, 1997
Relationships among continuous performance test (CPT), IQ, achievement, and memory/learning scores were explored for 1,280 children about 9 years old. Associations among the CPT measures and various cognitive/academic tasks suggest that all require attention and inhibition. The importance of assessing attention and disinhibition in psychological…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attention, Children, Cognitive Processes
Dulaney, Cynthia L.; And Others – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1996
This study examined recognition memory for items and their location among adults with Down syndrome (n=24), adults with nonspecific mental retardation (n=22), and community volunteers (n=20). No differences in memory for spatial location were found between the two groups with mental retardation, though both groups performed worse than control…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Downs Syndrome, Memory
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Luo, Dasen; Petrill, Stephen A. – Intelligence, 1999
Examined the relationship between elementary cognitive tasks and the general factor of intelligence ("g") through tests administered to 568 elementary school students in a study of twins. Findings indicate a memory processing component in addition to a general information processing component contributing to "g" estimates. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
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Farrant, Annette; Blades, Mark; Boucher, Jill – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1999
This study examined the metacognitive ability (recall readiness) in matched groups of children with autism, children with mental retardation, and normally developing children (all with a mental age of 7). Children with autism and children with mental retardation had impaired recall readiness compared to the normally developing children. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Cognitive Processes, Mental Retardation
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Naude, H.; Du Preez, C. S.; Pretorius, E. – Early Child Development and Care, 2004
This article aims to explore Executive Emotional System (EES) disruption as causal agent in frontal lobishness among abused children. The "Revised Senior South African Individual Scale" (SSAIS-R) was used to assess a sample population of seventy-five male and female subjects between the ages of 8 years 0 months and 16 years 11 months who were…
Descriptors: Memory, Child Abuse, Cognitive Processes, Children
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Semrud-Clikeman, Margaret – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2005
This review surveys the empirical literature for assessments of learning problems in children from a neuropsychological perspective. An evaluation of children with learning problems must consider measures of working memory, attention, executive function, and comprehension (listening and written), particularly for children who do not respond to…
Descriptors: Research, Memory, Learning Problems, Intervention
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Morris, Alison L.; Harris, Catherine L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
Does repetition blindness represent a failure of perception or of memory? In Experiment 1, participants viewed rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) sentences. When critical words (C1 and C2) were orthographically similar, C2 was frequently omitted from serial report; however, repetition priming for C2 on a postsentence lexical decision task was…
Descriptors: Vision, Blindness, Sentences, Vocabulary
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Malmberg, Kenneth J.; Zeelenberg, Rene; Shiffrin, Richard M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
E. Hirshman, J. Fisher, T. Henthom, J. Amdt, and A. Passanname (2002) found that Midazolam disrupts the mirror-patterned word-frequency effect for recognition memory by reversing the typical hit-rate advantage for low-frequency words. They noted that this result is consistent with dual-process accounts (e.g., R. C. Atkinson & J. F. Juola, 1974; G.…
Descriptors: Word Frequency, Recognition (Psychology), Memory, Cognitive Processes
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Lacroix, Guy L.; Giguere, Gyslain; Larochelle, Serge – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
S. W. Allen and L. R. Brooks (1991) have shown that exemplar memory can affect categorization even when participants are provided with a classification rule. G. Regehr and L. R. Brooks (1993) argued that stimuli must be individuated for such effects to occur. In this study, the authors further analyze the conditions that yield exemplar effects in…
Descriptors: Incidental Learning, Classification, Memory, Psychological Studies
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Horton, William S.; Gerrig, Richard J. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2005
Speakers in conversation routinely engage in audience design. That is, they construct their utterances to be understood by particular addressees. Standard accounts of audience design have frequently appealed to the notion of common ground. On this view, speakers produce well-designed utterances by expressly considering the knowledge they take as…
Descriptors: Audiences, Memory, Discourse Analysis, Cognitive Processes
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Fincher-Kiefer, Rebecca; D'Agostino, Paul R. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2004
It has been suggested that predictive and bridging inferences are generated at different levels of text representation: predictive inferences at a reader's situation model and bridging inferences at a reader's propositional textbase (Fincher-Kiefer, 1993, 1996; McDaniel, Schmalhofer, & Keefe, 2001; Schmalhofer, McDaniel, & Keefe, 2002). Recently,…
Descriptors: Memory, Inferences, Context Effect, Prediction
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Gerrig, Richard J.; O'Brien, Edward J. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2005
In this article, we articulate the critical differences between memory-based processing and explanation-based processing. We suggest that the most important claim of memory-based text processing is that the automatic processes that function with respect to text processing are all applications of ordinary memory processes. This claim contrasts with…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Language Processing, Reading Processes
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Park, R. J.; Goodyer, I. M.; Teasdale, J. D. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2004
Background: In adults there is evidence that the affective-cognitive processes of rumination and overgeneral autobiographical memory retrieval may play a part in maintaining depression. This study investigated the effects of induced rumination as compared to distraction on mood and categoric overgeneral memory in adolescents with first episode…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Cues, Adolescents, Memory
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George, Mary Reeni M.; Potts, Geoffrey; Kothman, Delia; Martin, Laura; Mukundan, C. R. – Brain and Cognition, 2004
Alcoholism is a major health problem afflicting people all over the world. Understanding the neural substrates of this addictive disorder may provide the basis for effective interventions. So-called ''executive processes'' play a role in cognitive functions like attention and working memory, and appear to be disrupted in alcoholism (Noel et al.,…
Descriptors: Alcoholism, Cognitive Processes, Memory, Brain
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