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Lee, Yuh-Shiow; Chiang, Wen-Chi; Hung, Hsu-Ching – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2008
This study examined the relationship between language experience and false memory produced by the DRM paradigm. The word lists used in Stadler, et al. (Memory & Cognition, 27, 494-500, 1999) were first translated into Chinese. False recall and false recognition for critical non-presented targets were then tested on a group of Chinese users.…
Descriptors: Word Lists, Associative Learning, Memory, Language Enrichment
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McDonough, Ian M.; Gallo, David A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Retrieval monitoring enhances episodic memory accuracy. For instance, false recognition is reduced when participants base their decisions on more distinctive recollections, a retrieval monitoring process called the distinctiveness heuristic. The experiments reported here tested the hypothesis that autobiographical elaboration during study (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Familiarity, Heuristics, Memory
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Grossberg, Stephen; Pearson, Lance R. – Psychological Review, 2008
How does the brain carry out working memory storage, categorization, and voluntary performance of event sequences? The LIST PARSE neural model proposes an answer that unifies the explanation of cognitive, neurophysiological, and anatomical data. It quantitatively simulates human cognitive data about immediate serial recall and free recall, and…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Brain, Neuropsychology, Neurological Organization
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Monroe, Scott M.; Mineka, Susan – Psychological Review, 2008
The mnemonic model of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) proposed by D. C. Rubin, D. Berntsen, and M. K. Bohni presents some provocative and potentially insightful ideas about this mental disorder. D. C. Rubin et al. suggested that PTSD is caused and maintained through a "pathogenic memory" (D. C. Rubin et al., 2008, p. 985) of a negative event…
Descriptors: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Mental Disorders, Memory, Mnemonics
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Megreya, Ahmed M.; Burton, A. Mike – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2008
Eyewitness memory is known to be fallible. We describe 3 experiments that aim to establish baseline performance for recognition of unfamiliar faces. In Experiment 1, viewers were shown live actors or photos (targets), and then immediately presented with arrays of 10 faces (test items). Asked whether the target was present among the test items, and…
Descriptors: Memory, Photography, Visual Aids, Visual Discrimination
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Canal, Clinton E.; Chang, Qing; Gold, Paul E. – Learning & Memory, 2008
Infusions of CREB antisense into the amygdala prior to training impair memory for aversive tasks, suggesting that the antisense may interfere with CRE-mediated gene transcription and protein synthesis important for the formation of new memories within the amygdala. However, the amygdala also appears to modulate memory formation in distributed…
Descriptors: Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Role, Drug Use
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Kormos, Judit; Safar, Anna – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2008
In our research we addressed the question what the relationship is between phonological short-term and working memory capacity and performance in an end-of-year reading, writing, listening, speaking and use of English test. The participants of our study were 121 secondary school students aged 15-16 in the first intensive language training year of…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Bilingual Education, Program Effectiveness, Short Term Memory
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Geake, John G. – Roeper Review, 2008
Gifted intelligence is underpinned by those aspects of neural function that enable an enhanced facility to engage in fluid analogizing: a cognitive-level construct that describes intermodule information articulation within the brain. Evidence for this claim comes from a program of neuroimaging investigations of the neural underpinnings and IQ…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Investigations, Gifted, Short Term Memory
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Park, Heekyeong; Uncapher, Melina R.; Rugg, Michael D. – Learning & Memory, 2008
The present study investigated whether the neural correlates of source memory vary according to study task. Subjects studied visually presented words in one of two background contexts. In each test, subjects made old/new recognition and source memory judgments. In one study test cycle, study words were subjected to animacy judgments, whereas in…
Descriptors: Memory, Correlation, Neurology, Task Analysis
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Duff, Melissa C.; Hengst, Julie A.; Tranel, Daniel; Cohen, Neal J. – Brain and Language, 2008
In previous work we reported robust collaborative learning for referential labels in patients with hippocampal amnesia, resulting in increasingly rapid and economical communication or "common ground" with their partners [Duff, M. C., Hengst, J., Tranel, D., & Cohen, N. J. (2006). "Development of shared information in communication despite…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Discourse Analysis, Patients, Memory
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Ternes, Marguerite; Yuille, John C. – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2008
Background: Since individuals with intellectual disabilities are often the only witnesses to alleged crimes, it is important to know their capacity to provide eyewitness testimony. Methods: Twenty-two participants with intellectual disabilities and 23 comparison group participants had their photographs taken by a confederate. One to two weeks…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Identification, Recall (Psychology), Adults
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Fischman, Mark G.; Christina, Robert W.; Anson, J. Greg – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2008
Franklin Henry's "memory drum" theory of neuromotor reaction (Henry & Rogers, 1960) was one of the most influential studies of the response programming stage of information processing. The paper is the most-cited study ever published in the "Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport." However, few people know there is a noteworthy error in the…
Descriptors: Theories, Motor Reactions, Memory, Reaction Time
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Wood, Justin N.; Hauser, Marc D.; Glynn, David D.; Barner, David – Cognition, 2008
Fundamental questions in cognitive science concern the origins and nature of the units that compose visual experience. Here, we investigate the capacity to individuate and store information about non-solid portions, asking in particular whether free-ranging rhesus monkeys ("Macaca mulatta") quantify portions of a non-solid substance presented in…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Psychology, Language Processing, Language Acquisition
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Briggs, James F.; Riccio, David C. – Learning and Motivation, 2008
The present studies examined whether the retrieval of an old "reactivated" memory could be brought under the control of new contextual cues. In Experiment 1 rats trained in one context were exposed to different contextual cues either immediately, 60 or 120 min after a cued reactivation of the training memory. When tested in the shifted context,…
Descriptors: Cues, Context Effect, Memory, Language Processing
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Onishi, Kristine H.; Murphy, Gregory L.; Bock, Kathryn – Cognitive Psychology, 2008
Three cued-recall experiments examined the effect of category typicality on the ordering of words in sentence production. Past research has found that typical items tend to be mentioned before atypical items in a phrase--a pattern usually associated with lexical variables (like word frequency), and yet typicality is a conceptual variable.…
Descriptors: Sentences, Semantics, Long Term Memory, Word Order
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