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Nippold, Marilyn A. – Topics in Language Disorders, 1992
This review considers aspects of normal mental storage and retrieval, storage and retrieval in disordered word finding, possible causes of word finding disorders, and clinical implications in both storage and retrieval components. Implications call for attention to increasing word knowledge, storage strength, naming accuracy and speed, retrieval…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Cognitive Processes, Etiology
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Kail, Robert – Developmental Psychology, 1992
The memory, processing speed, and articulation rate of 24 9 year olds and 24 adults were measured. Results supported a model in which individuals execute cognitive processes more rapidly as they grow older. In addition, age contributes to more rapid rehearsal of words, which yields more accurate recall. (BG)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Articulation (Speech), Cognitive Development
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Salthouse, Timothy A. – Developmental Psychology, 1992
A total of 451 adults participated in 2 studies of the causes of age differences that occur in cognitive performance when tasks increase in complexity. Results support the hypothesis that more complex cognitive tasks place greater demands on a working memory resource that declines as age increases. (LB)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Memory
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Lapadat, Judith; And Others – Canadian Journal of Counselling, 1993
Examined what adolescents (n=43) remembered from viewing videotapes about careers. Compared two videotaped career presentations, one produced with explicit intent of enhancing visual and experiential content, other widely used in counseling centers. Students preferred former, although there were no differences in number of visual or verbal…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Foreign Countries, High School Students, High Schools
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Brainerd, C. J. – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1990
Replies to Guttentag's commentary on Brainerd and others' research on forgetting. Discusses measurement of forgetting, differentiation of storage from retrieval factors, and ramifications of findings for strategic or process theories of memory development. Considers the role of research on forgetting in child development research. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Learning Strategies, Mathematical Models
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Maisto, Albert A.; Queen, Debbie Elaine – Educational Gerontology, 1992
The performance of 53 younger adults (mean age 20.7) and 52 older adults (mean age 68.3) was compared in a memory task involving pictures, words, and pictures-plus-words. Results showed (1) significantly higher recall scores for younger adults; (2) equivalent picture superiority effect for both groups; and (3) decline in older adults' performance…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Memory, Older Adults, Pictorial Stimuli
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Baker-Ward, Lynne; And Others – Child Development, 1993
Children at ages three, five, and seven provided reports of their physical examinations immediately following the checkup and after delay of either one, three, or six weeks, or only after three weeks. Retention of event was extensive and accurate and not significantly affected by the time delays. Recall of seven-year olds was greater than that of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Long Term Memory, Physical Examinations, Recall (Psychology)
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Poole, Debra A.; White, Lawrence T. – Developmental Psychology, 1993
Building upon a previous study, examined 6-, 8-, and 10-year-old and adult witnesses' memories of an event experienced 2 years earlier. Found that children were less consistent than adults across sessions of yes-no questions, less accurate in responses to open-ended questions, and more likely to fabricate answers to a question about a man's…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Long Term Memory
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Howe, Mark L.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1993
Three experiments measured 2.5- and 3.5-year-olds' long-term retention of object-location pairings. The subjects were provided with reinforcing information three weeks after the initial exposure and tested four weeks after initial exposure. It was found that this reinstatement (1) improved children's long-term retention; (2) affected both…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Early Childhood Education, Long Term Memory, Preschool Children
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Porter, Stephen; And Others – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 1995
Fifteen deaf and 11 hearing children (ages 8-10) witnessed slides depicting a wallet theft and were interviewed using a free recall approach followed by increasingly directive questions. Although accuracy of the two groups did not differ in free recall, deaf children provided less accurate responses to directive questions, whereas accuracy of the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Deafness, Information Sources, Memory
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Service, Robert F. – Science, 1994
Discusses the findings of a study that involves the testing of the pharmaceutical Ampakines on laboratory rats. Rats administered Ampakines learn remarkably quickly to navigate new mazes. The question now is does the drug make the rats alert or memory enhanced. Implications for treatment in humans is discussed. (ZWH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Memory, Pharmacology, Research and Development
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Cohen, Ronald L. – Intelligence, 1994
A case is made for the construction of nomothetic theories that can also explain individual differences. The discussion uses examples from the memory area and presents an approach to memory that explains individual findings and individual differences in the context of a single model. (SLD)
Descriptors: Encoding (Psychology), Individual Differences, Memory, Models
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Busey, Thomas A.; Loftus, Geoffrey R. – Psychological Review, 1994
A theory of visual information acquisition and visual memory is described that conjoins two models that have been used to describe low-level perceptual and higher level cognitive processes. Six experiments with 21 adult observers generally support the theory, although some weakness is discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Memory, Observation
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Pezdek, Kathy – Family Relations, 1994
Responds to previous article by Fincham, Beach, Moore, and Diener (this issue) on child sexual abuse. Focuses on importance of recognizing that attempts to reduce probability of false claims of child abuse would result in increasing probability of missing true claims of child abuse. Offers hypothesis-testing framework as useful heuristic for…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Welfare, Hypothesis Testing, Memory
Ohr, Phyllis, S.; Fagen, Jeffrey W. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1991
This study of 20 3-month-old infants with Down's syndrome and 20 nondisabled infants found that both groups were successfully trained to produce movement in an overhead crib mobile by kicking, and displayed long-term retention a week later. Conditioning and retention-test performance of the two groups did not differ. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Conditioning, Downs Syndrome, Infants, Learning
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