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Kail, Robert – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1993
Tested adults and children (age 6 to 16 years) on 4 speeded tasks that included 19 experimental conditions. The 6- to 16-year olds' response times decreased with age as a function of adults' response times. (MM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Age Differences, Children
Merrill, Edward C.; Taube, Merideth – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1996
Negative priming was assessed to investigate what information persons with (n=18) or without (n=18) mental retardation access from distractors. All subjects showed automatic activation of both targets and distractors at a short time interval. After a long interval, only the subjects without mental retardation exhibited inhibition of the…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, Mental Retardation, Responses
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Lejeune, Helga; Richelle, Marc; Wearden, J. H. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
The article discusses two important influences of B. F. Skinner, and later workers in the behavior-analytic tradition, on the study of animal timing. The first influence is methodological, and is traced from the invention of schedules imposing temporal constraints or periodicities on animals in "The Behavior of Organisms," through the rate…
Descriptors: Animals, Animal Behavior, Behavioral Science Research, Scheduling
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Glickman, Mark E.; Gray, Jeremy R.; Morales, Carlos J. – Psychometrika, 2005
Both the speed and accuracy of responding are important measures of performance. A well-known interpretive difficulty is that participants may differ in their strategy, trading speed for accuracy, with no change in underlying competence. Another difficulty arises when participants respond slowly and inaccurately (rather than quickly but…
Descriptors: Memory, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes, Attention Control
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Pellecchia, Geraldine L.; Shockley, Kevin; Turvey, M. T. – Cognitive Science, 2005
Does a concurrent cognitive task affect the dynamics of bimanual rhythmic coordination? In-phase coordination was performed under manipulations of phase detuning and movement frequency and either singly or in combination with an arithmetic task. Predicted direction-specific shifts in stable relative phase from 0 degrees due to detuning and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Motion, Arithmetic, Psychomotor Skills
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Kowalska, Joanna; Szelag, Elzbieta – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2006
Objective: Congenital deafness provides the opportunity to study how atypical sensory and language experiences affect different aspects of information processing, e.g., time perception. Methods: Using two methods of temporal estimation, reproduction (Exp. 1) and production (Exp. 2), the effect of deafness on duration judgment was investigated…
Descriptors: Deafness, Time Perspective, Adolescents, Accuracy
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Moscoso del Prado Martin, Fermin; Kostic, Aleksandar; Baayen, R. Harold – Cognition, 2004
In this study we introduce an information-theoretical formulation of the emergence of type- and token-based effects in morphological processing. We describe a probabilistic measure of the informational complexity of a word, its information residual, which encompasses the combined influences of the amount of information contained by the target word…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Language Processing, Reaction Time, Indo European Languages
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Tombu, Michael; Jolicoeur, Pierre – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
The divergent predictions of 2 models of dual-task performance are investigated. The central bottleneck and central capacity sharing models argue that a central stage of information processing is capacity limited, whereas stages before and after are capacity free. The models disagree about the nature of this central capacity limitation. The…
Descriptors: Models, Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time
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Navon, David; Miller, Jeff – Cognitive Psychology, 2002
The model of a single central bottleneck for human information processing is critically examined. Most evidence cited in support of the model has been observed within the overlapping tasks paradigm. It is shown here that most findings obtained within that paradigm and that were used to support the model are also consistent with a simple resource…
Descriptors: Models, Criticism, Cognitive Processes, Information Processing
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Simoneau, Michael; Markovits, Henry – Developmental Psychology, 2003
Two studies examined conditional reasoning with false premises. In Study 1, 12- and 16-year-old adolescents made "if-then" inferences after producing an alternative antecedent for the major premise. Older participants made more errors on the simple modus ponens inference than did younger ones. Reasoning with a false premise reduced this effect.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Preadolescents, Inferences, Inhibition
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Freitag, Christine M.; Konrad, Carsten; Haberlen, Melanie; Kleser, Christina; von Gontard, Alexander; Reith, Wolfgang; Troje, Nikolaus F.; Krick, Christoph – Neuropsychologia, 2008
In individuals with autism or autism-spectrum-disorder (ASD), conflicting results have been reported regarding the processing of biological motion tasks. As biological motion perception and recognition might be related to impaired imitation, gross motor skills and autism specific psychopathology in individuals with ASD, we performed a functional…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Autism, Imitation, Psychopathology
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Valdez, Pablo; Reilly, Thomas; Waterhouse, Jim – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2008
Cognitive performance is affected by an individual's characteristics and the environment, as well as by the nature of the task and the amount of practice at it. Mental performance tests range in complexity and include subjective estimates of mood, simple objective tests (reaction time), and measures of complex performance that require decisions to…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Mathematical Models, Academic Achievement, Performance Tests
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Waniek, Jacqueline; Ewald, Karolin – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2008
This study examines the cognitive costs of navigation aids in a hypermedia learning task. In a 2(navigable vs. non-navigable) x 2(map vs. content list) experimental design cognitive requirements were measured by users' eye movement data. Additionally, data from users' navigation operations, knowledge acquisition, and subjective evaluation of the…
Descriptors: Research Design, Eye Movements, Hypermedia, Cognitive Processes
Mullis, Ina V.S., Ed.; Martin, Michael O., Ed.; Minnich, Chad A., Ed.; Stanco, Gabrielle M., Ed.; Arora, Alka, Ed.; Centurino, Victoria A.S., Ed.; Castle, Courtney E., Ed. – International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement, 2012
For more than 50 years, the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) has been instrumental in developing an analytical model for understanding the relationships between educational policy (the intended curriculum), classroom and instructional practices (the implemented curriculum), and educational learning…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Educational Policy, Mathematics Curriculum, Science Curriculum
Tatsuoka, Kikumi; Tatsuoka, Maurice – 1979
The differences in types of information-processing skills developed by different instructional backgrounds affect, negatively or positively, the learning of further advanced instructional materials. If prior and subsequent instructional methods are different, a proactive inhibition effect produces low achievement scores on a post test. This poses…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Cognitive Processes, Computer Assisted Testing, Diagnostic Tests
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