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Showing 1 to 15 of 92 results Save | Export
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Warmelink, Lara; O'Connell, Felicity – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Construal level theory states that future events that are nearer in the future and events that are more likely to happen have lower construal levels, and therefore have less detail, than events that are further away and/or less likely to happen. Consistent with this theory, the number of details in a statement can be a moderately good cue to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Intention, Deception, Cues
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Meier, Beat; Cottini, Milvia – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Responding to a prospective memory task in the course of an ongoing activity requires switching tasks, which typically comes at a cost in performing the ongoing activity. Similarly, when the prospective memory task is deactivated, a cost can occur when previously relevant prospective memory targets appear in the course of the ongoing activity. In…
Descriptors: Intention, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Undergraduate Students
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Gilbert, Liz T.; Delaney, Peter F.; Racsmány, Mihály – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
List-method directed forgetting usually involves asking people to study a list, followed by a cue to forget it, and then studying a second list. Prior work suggests that List 2 encoding is necessary for directed forgetting to occur, but recent studies have found that moving the forget cue from List 1 to List 2 allows people to selectively forget…
Descriptors: Memory, Information Retrieval, Recall (Psychology), Word Lists
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Rebecca Wilcoxson; Emma L. Turley – Discover Education, 2024
Criminal justice practitioners' use of erroneous lie-detection methods contributes to inaccurate convictions and research indicates some Queensland police are using fallible methods. A recent study showed that Queensland universities primarily ignore the topic of lie detection. Thus, criminal justice students entering Queensland universities with…
Descriptors: Universities, Law Enforcement, Deception, Identification
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Rodrigues, Evelina D.; Marôco, João; Frota, Sónia – Infant and Child Development, 2021
Different methodologies applied in human and non-human primate studies limit the comparisons that can be made. The early communicative gestures of 10 children between 7 and 12 months were analysed using a descriptive approach usually found in non-human primate studies. Silent-visual gestures were the most used, followed by contact and audible…
Descriptors: Infants, Nonverbal Communication, Sensory Experience, Learning Modalities
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Gleason, LaDonna L.; Bender, Ansley M.; Chen, Jason I.; Bozzay, Melanie; Hangartner, Renee; Romero, Gabriela; Labouliere, Christa D.; Elzy, Meredith; Gryglewicz, Kimberley; Karver, Marc S. – School Mental Health, 2022
Suicidal thoughts and behaviors are highly prevalent among adolescents, and peers are often the first, and sometimes only, people to know about youth suicidality. Since many adolescents do not directly disclose suicidal thoughts, school-based suicide prevention programs aim to train youth to recognize warning signs of suicide in their peers that…
Descriptors: Suicide, Adolescents, Peer Relationship, Cues
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Armstrong, Cory L.; Hou, Jue; Towery, Nathan – Applied Environmental Education and Communication, 2022
This study sought to measure risk perception and behavioral intention in rural and urban communities in Mississippi and Alabama when severe weather strikes. We developed an experiment testing how visual cues and media messages surrounding an impending hurricane could influence an individual's decision-making in the situation. Respondents were…
Descriptors: Risk, Intention, Rural Population, Urban Population
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Szalai, Gerda; Egyed, Katalin – Infant and Child Development, 2020
Toddlers show high sensitivity to creator's intention when they interpret pictures. Previous research suggest that toddlers' performance can be facilitated in a picture comprehension task by making available the creator's intention that is, the social origin of picture-creation. The present study aims to test the generalizability of this…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Pictorial Stimuli, Task Analysis, Generalization
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Gérard, Jessica; Helme-Guizon, Agnès – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
In most retail environments, customers can handle products. However, the downside of this freedom to touch products is product contamination. The objectives of this paper are threefold: (a) to examine the effects of contamination cues (tangible vs. intangible) on consumer responses; (b) to show the mediating role of contamination, disgust, and…
Descriptors: Cues, Psychological Patterns, Hygiene, Sanitation
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Redshaw, Jonathan; Vandersee, Johanna; Bulley, Adam; Gilbert, Sam J. – Child Development, 2018
This study explored under what conditions young children would set reminders to aid their memory for delayed intentions. A computerized task requiring participants to carry out delayed intentions under varying levels of cognitive load was presented to 63 children (aged between 6.9 and 13.0 years old). Children of all ages demonstrated…
Descriptors: Cues, Memory, Intention, Prompting
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Sinagra, Chloe; Wiener, Seth – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
Face masks affect the transmission of speech and obscure facial cues. Here, we examine how this reduction in acoustic and facial information affects a listener's understanding of speech prosody. English sentence pairs that differed in their intonational (statement/question) and emotional (happy/sad) prosody were created. These pairs were recorded…
Descriptors: Intonation, Speech Communication, Suprasegmentals, Human Body
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Dhondt, Ann; Van keer, Ines; Nijs, Sara; van der Putten, Annette; Maes, Bea – Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 2021
The aim of this study was to develop a coding scheme that enables researchers and practitioners to conduct a detailed analysis of the communicative behavior of young children with significant cognitive and motor developmental delays. Currently, there is a paucity of methods to do conduct such an analysis. For the study, video observations of three…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Interpersonal Communication, Developmental Delays, Physical Disabilities
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Zhou, Peng; Ma, Weiyi; Zhan, Likan – First Language, 2020
The present study investigated whether Mandarin-speaking preschool children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) were able to use prosodic cues to understand others' communicative intentions. Using the visual world eye-tracking paradigm, the study found that unlike typically developing (TD) 4-year-olds, both 4-year-olds with ASD and 5-year-olds…
Descriptors: Mandarin Chinese, Preschool Children, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Meinhardt, Martin J.; Bell, Raoul; Buchner, Axel; Röer, Jan P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
A large body of evidence shows an animacy effect on memory in that animate entities are better remembered than inanimate ones. Yet, the reason for this mnemonic prioritization remains unclear. In the survival processing literature, the assumption that richness of encoding is responsible for adaptive memory benefits has received substantial…
Descriptors: Memory, Prediction, Language Processing, Associative Learning
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Calderon, Sofia; Mac Giolla, Erik; Ask, Karl; Granhag, Pär Anders – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
The aim of this study was to examine how people mentally represent and depict true and false statements about claimed future actions--so-called true and false intentions. On the basis of construal level theory, which proposes that subjectively unlikely events are more abstractly represented than likely ones, we hypothesized that false intentions…
Descriptors: Deception, Integrity, Cognitive Processes, Futures (of Society)
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