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Showing 1,111 to 1,125 of 1,401 results Save | Export
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Coyle, Thomas R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Examined whether a sample of variability measures could be reduced to a smaller number of factors with 8 independent samples of second through fourth graders and adults. Found that a 2-factor model of strategy diversity and strategy change was supported for all samples. Strategy diversity positively related to children's recall; strategy change…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Classification
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Waters, Harriet Salatas – Child Development, 2000
Examines the concept of utilization deficiency related to memory strategy development. Argues that problems with current definition obscure previous important theoretical distinctions and limit investigations of strategy inefficiencies that are likely to be important in understanding development of strategy use. Maintains that the developmental…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Children, Definitions
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Miller, Patricia H. – Child Development, 2000
Focuses on the importance and meaning of the degree of spontaneity in memory strategy production. Situates the concept of utilization deficiency within current work on memory strategy heterogeneity, contextual support, and situation-specific skills. Concludes that work on utilization deficiencies helps balance the focus on early emergence of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Children, Definitions
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Howe, Mark L. – Developmental Psychology, 2002
Examined effects of interfering information and instructions to forget on preschoolers' and kindergartners' story retention. Found that retroactive interference affected preschoolers' storage- and retrieval-based forgetting rates and kindergartners' storage-based forgetting rates. Intentional forgetting reduced retroactive interference primarily…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Inhibition, Kindergarten Children, Memory
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Justus, Timothy; Ravizza, Susan M.; Fiez, Julie A.; Ivry, Richard B. – Brain and Language, 2005
Ten cerebellar patients were compared to 10 control subjects on a verbal working memory task in which the phonological similarity of the words to be remembered and their modality of presentation were manipulated. Cerebellar patients demonstrated a reduction of the phonological similarity effect relative to controls. Further, this reduction did not…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Aphasia, Cognitive Processes, Phonology
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Huk, T. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2006
Empirical studies that focus on the impact of three-dimensional (3D) visualizations on learning are to date rare and inconsistent. According to the ability-as-enhancer hypothesis, high spatial ability learners should benefit particularly as they have enough cognitive capacity left for mental model construction. In contrast, the…
Descriptors: Memory, Cytology, Spatial Ability, Models
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Little, Deborah M.; McGrath, Lauren M.; Prentice, Kristen J.; Wingfield, Arthur – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Traditional models of human memory have postulated the need for a brief phonological or verbatim representation of verbal input as a necessary gateway to a higher level conceptual representation of the input. Potter has argued that meaningful sentences may be encoded directly in a conceptual short-term memory (CSTM) running parallel in time to…
Descriptors: Sentences, Context Effect, Semantics, Short Term Memory
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London, Manuel; Polzer, Jeffrey T.; Omoregie, Heather – Human Resource Development Review, 2005
This article presents a multilevel model of group learning that focuses on antecedents and consequences of interpersonal congruence, transactive memory, and feedback processes. The model holds that members' self-verification motives and situational conditions (e.g., member diversity and task demands) give rise to identity negotiation behaviors…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Congruence (Psychology), Memory, Social Networks
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Dolan, Conor V.; Colom, Roberto; Abad, Francisco J.; Wicherts, Jelte M.; Hessen, David J.; van de Sluis, Sophie – Intelligence, 2006
We investigated sex effects and the effects of educational attainment (EA) on the covariance structure of the WAIS-III in a subsample of the Spanish standardization data. We fitted both first order common factor models and second order common factor models. The latter include general intelligence ("g") as a second order common factor.…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Gender Differences, Intelligence, Models
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Duffy, Sean; Huttenlocher, Janellen; Crawford, L. Elizabeth – Developmental Science, 2006
The present study tests a model of category effects upon stimulus estimation in children. Prior work with adults suggests that people inductively generalize distributional information about a category of stimuli and use this information to adjust their estimates of individual stimuli in a way that maximizes average accuracy in estimation (see…
Descriptors: Classification, Computation, Visual Stimuli, Generalization
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Campanella, Jennifer; Rovee-Collier, Carolyn – Infancy, 2005
Young infants spend most of their waking time looking around, but whether they learn anything about what they see is unknown. We used a sensory preconditioning paradigm and a deferred imitation task to assess if 3-month-olds formed a latent association between 2 objects (S[subscript 1], S[subscript 2]) that they merely saw together. Because…
Descriptors: Imitation, Infants, Cognitive Development, Learning Processes
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Smith, Rebekah E.; Bayen, Ute J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Event-based prospective memory involves remembering to perform an action in response to a particular future event. Normal younger and older adults performed event-based prospective memory tasks in 2 experiments. The authors applied a formal multinomial processing tree model of prospective memory (Smith & Bayen, 2004) to disentangle age differences…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Older Adults, Age Differences, Memory
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Murdock, Bennet – Psychological Review, 2006
The sum-difference theory of remembering and knowing (STREAK) provides a sophisticated account of many interactions in the remember-know (R-K) area (C. M. Rotello, N. A. Macmillan, & J. A. Reeder, 2004; see record 2004-15929-002). It assumes 2 orthogonal strength dimensions and oblique criterion planes. Another dual-process model (J. T. Wixted…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Models, Memory, Evaluative Thinking
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Riggs, Kevin J.; McTaggart, James; Simpson, Andrew; Freeman, Richard P. J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
Using the Luck and Vogel change detection paradigm, we sought to investigate the capacity of visual working memory in 5-, 7-, and 10-year-olds. We found that performance on the task improved significantly with age and also obtained evidence that the capacity of visual working memory approximately doubles between 5 and 10 years of age, where it…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Short Term Memory, Children, Models
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Hourihan, Kathleen L.; Taylor, Tracy L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
On the premise that committing a word to memory is a type of covert action capable of being stopped, this study merged an item-method directed forgetting paradigm with a stop signal paradigm. The primary dependent measure was immediate recall. Indicating that participants were able to countermand the default instruction to remember, there was an…
Descriptors: Models, Recall (Psychology), Retention (Psychology), Memory
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