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Thorp, Carmany – Understanding Our Gifted, 2009
Learning style, emotional health, and short term memory all act in concert to affect one's capacity to learn on any given day. However, with a few simple rules, lessons can be structured and delivered to meet more kids' needs more often. Current brain research gives teachers a new way to understand the "best practices" they have been taught. The…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Short Term Memory, Brain, Teaching Methods
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Bowers, Jeffrey S.; Damian, Markus F.; Davis, Colin J. – Psychological Review, 2009
Presents a postscript to the current authors' comment on the original article, "Short-term memory for serial order: A recurrent neural network model," by M. M. Botvinick and D. C. Plaut. In their commentary, the current authors demonstrated that Botvinick and Plaut's (2006) model of immediate serial recall catastrophically fails when familiar…
Descriptors: Serial Ordering, Short Term Memory, Alphabets, Models
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Sampaio, Cristina; Wang, Ranxiao Frances – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Studies have consistently shown a spatial memory bias such that a target location is remembered toward the prototypical location of the region to which the target belongs, indicating a blending between the target's specific information and the generic information of its region. The authors investigated whether people retain a veridical…
Descriptors: Memory, Spatial Ability, Recognition (Psychology), Task Analysis
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Xiao, Chengli; Mou, Weimin; McNamara, Timothy P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
In 8 experiments, the authors examined the use of representations of self-to-object or object-to-object spatial relations during locomotion. Participants learned geometrically regular or irregular layouts of objects while standing at the edge or in the middle and then pointed to objects while blindfolded in 3 conditions: before turning (baseline),…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Psychomotor Skills, Task Analysis, Undergraduate Students
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Barton, Brian; Ester, Edward F.; Awh, Edward – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Are resources in visual working memory allocated in a continuous or a discrete fashion? On one hand, flexible resource models suggest that capacity is determined by a central resource pool that can be flexibly divided such that items of greater complexity receive a larger share of resources. On the other hand, if capacity in working memory is…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Experiments, Mnemonics, Memorization
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Han, Suk Won; Kim, Min-Shik – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
There has been a controversy on whether working memory can guide attentional selection. Some researchers have reported that the contents of working memory guide attention automatically in visual search (D. Soto, D. Heinke, G. W. Humphreys, & M. J. Blanco, 2005). On the other hand, G.F. Woodman and S. J. Luck (2007) reported that they could not…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Attention, Selection, Search Strategies
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McCabe, David P.; Roediger, Henry L., III; McDaniel, Mark A.; Balota, David A. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
In 1985 Tulving introduced the remember-know procedure, whereby subjects are asked to distinguish between memories that involve retrieval of contextual details (remembering) and memories that do not (knowing). Several studies have been reported showing age-related declines in remember hits, which has typically been interpreted as supporting…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Memory, Age Differences, Aging (Individuals)
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Kratzig, Gregory P.; Arbuthnott, Katherine D. – Metacognition and Learning, 2009
Metacognition is a person's ability to think about their own thinking, to think about their own cognitive ability and knowledge and then to take the appropriate regulatory steps when a problem is detected. Although considerable research has examined the level of such ability in various contexts, there has been relatively little study on whether…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Metacognition, Memory, Cognitive Ability
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Sharma, Mridula; Purdy, Suzanne C.; Kelly, Andrea S. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2009
Purpose: The authors assessed comorbidity of auditory processing disorder (APD), language impairment (LI), and reading disorder (RD) in school-age children. Method: Children (N = 68) with suspected APD and nonverbal IQ standard scores of 80 or more were assessed using auditory, language, reading, attention, and memory measures. Auditory processing…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Reading Difficulties, Auditory Perception, Perceptual Impairments
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Gaigg, Sebastian B.; Bowler, Dermot M. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2009
Recent evidence suggests that individuals with ASD may not accumulate distinct representations of emotional information throughout development. On the basis of this observation we predicted that such individuals would not be any less likely to falsely remember emotionally significant as compared to neutral words when such "illusory memories" are…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Emotional Response, Cognitive Processes
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Lusk, Danielle L.; Evans, Amber D.; Jeffrey, Thomas R.; Palmer, Keith R.; Wikstrom, Chris S.; Doolittle, Peter E. – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2009
Research in multimedia learning lacks an emphasis on individual difference variables, such as working memory capacity (WMC). The effects of WMC and the segmentation of multimedia instruction were examined by assessing the recall and application of low (n = 66) and high (n = 67) working memory capacity students randomly assigned to either a…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Individual Differences, Short Term Memory, History Instruction
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Villanueva, Victor – College English, 2009
Dr. Albizu Campos was a Harvard-educated Puerto Rican politician who was sentenced to eighty years of imprisonment for what he said--sedition. He was called "el Maestro," a powerful speaker, with thousands gathering to listen to his deliberative rhetoric for freedom. He urged the people to reclaim their cultural history and national…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Rhetoric, Social Studies, Puerto Ricans
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Paesler, M. A. – Physics Teacher, 2009
Digital computers use different kinds of memory, each of which is either volatile or nonvolatile. On most computers only the hard drive memory is nonvolatile, i.e., it retains all information stored on it when the power is off. When a computer is turned on, an operating system stored on the hard drive is loaded into the computer's memory cache and…
Descriptors: Memory, Computers, Physics, Science Education
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Haden, Catherine A.; Ornstein, Peter A. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2009
Research on mother-child reminiscing about previously experienced events carried out over the last 20 years indicates clear linkages between mothers' use of an elaborative conversational style and children's developing skills for remembering. The articles that comprise this special issue utilize both longitudinal designs and experimental methods,…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Mothers, Memory, Sharing Behavior
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Senay, Ibrahim; Keysar, Boaz – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2009
A long and narrow piece of wood is "a bat," "a stick," "a club," or "firewood." In fact, anything can be described from multiple perspectives, each suggesting a different conceptualization. People keep track of how speakers conceptualize things and expect them to describe them similarly in the future. This article demonstrates that these…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Verbal Communication, Cues, Identification
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