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Herman, James F.; And Others – Child Development, 1982
Examines (1) the effect of increased motor involvement with an environment on children's memory for spatial locations, and (2) the effect of different degrees of motor involvement under intentional and incidental memory conditions. Thirty boys and 30 girls at each of kindergarten and third-grade levels were individually tested in a large-scale,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary School Students, Kindergarten Children, Memory
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Flexser, Arthur J. – Psychological Review, 1981
Contingency analyses have been employed to assess the degree to which outcomes of successive tests of corresponding items deviate from stochastic independence. A method of adjusting contingency tables to remove the effects of subject and item inhomogeneities, is presented. The method represents a partial solution to the "Simpson's…
Descriptors: Correlation, Expectancy Tables, Goodness of Fit, Item Analysis
Srull, Thomas K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1981
This research had two complementary objectives, descriptive and theoretical. Experiments are described concerning a network model based on human associative memory theory. Subjects were given trait information about a target to create an initial expectancy, then exposed to behavioral information which was either congruent or incongruent with that…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Memory
Shand, Michael A.; Klima, Edward S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1981
A series of unordered recall tasks was administered to congenitally deaf subjects in three experiments using American Sign Language (ASL). The findings refuted the suffix effect resulting solely from sensory store differences or the effect arising from differences in processing "static" versus "changing-state" input.…
Descriptors: Adults, American Sign Language, Cognitive Processes, Congenital Impairments
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Wellman, Henry M.; And Others – Child Development, 1981
Investigates children's understanding of combined effects of different variables influencing memory. Preschoolers, second graders, fourth graders, and adults predicted how many items a depicted character could recall in several memory situations that were produced by factorially crossing three levels of "items to-be-remembered" with…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Potts, George R.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1981
Factors affecting the failure to use world knowledge to complete an otherwise incomplete linear ordering was examined. Failure persisted after three repetitions was unaffected by order of presentation or nature of test procedure. Performance was affected by overall amounts of known and new information and by their relation. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Individual Differences, Knowledge Level
Glenberg, Arthur M.; Smith, Steven M. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1981
States that recall of items given spaced repetitions is generally superior to recall of items given immediate repetitions. Reports on a test of Jacobi's hypothesis that this spacing effect is explained by the distinction between problem solving and remembering. Suggests that the effect cannot be explained solely by this distinction. (Author/MES)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology, Hypothesis Testing, Memory
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Perlmutter, Marion – Journal of Gerontology, 1979
Adults in their twenties and sixties were tested for free recall, cued recall, and recognition of words that they had studied in an intentional memory task or generated associations to in an incidental orienting task. Significant age-related declines in performance on intentional items were observed regardless of type of memory test. (Author)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Age Differences, Cues, Intentional Learning
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Muhs, Paul J.; And Others – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 1979
Performance on Piagetian logical concept tasks, standardized intellectual measures, and measures of memory ability was assessed cross-sectionally. Factorial analyses revealed significant chronological age main effects for all tasks except transitivity of weight. Covariance analyses indicated educational level is generally more closely related to…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adults, Age, Cognitive Measurement
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Johnson, Lucie R.; And Others – Child Development, 1979
Reports three experiments which investigated the ability of children aged four to nine years to organize body-location information in recall. Attempted to correct for methodological confounding in previous similar research. (JMB)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Freehand Drawing, Human Body
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Shapiro, Colin Michael; And Others – Journal of Medical Education, 1980
Although it has been suggested that sleep, and particularly REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, plays an important role in information processing, this study found no relationship between any aspect of sleep, in particular time of arousal during the week and on weekends, and academic performance. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior, Higher Education, Learning Processes
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Ironsmith, Marsha – Child Development, 1980
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary School Students, Memory, Pictorial Stimuli
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Lawson, M. J.; Fueloep, Sandra – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
Two groups of retarded adults were trained to use a cumulative rehearsal strategy for a serial recall task. Subjects who received instructions emphasizing the intended purpose and potential uses of the trained strategy performed significantly better than subjects invited to participate in "a remembering task." (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Adults, Intentional Learning, Memory, Moderate Mental Retardation
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Hertel, Paula T.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
The effects of subsequent related information and cognitive flexibility on prose recall were studied. Subjects read a passage; then were given either consistent or contradictory information. Errors in cued recall, reflecting the subsequent information, were more frequently produced after a three-week delay than after two days. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Confidence Testing, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Loper, Ann B. – Exceptional Education Quarterly: Teaching Exceptional Children to Use Cognitive Strategies, 1980
An examination of the role of metacognitive thinking (a secondary level of understanding in which an individual shows knowledge of his/her own cognitive process and products) in the cognitive training of exceptional students is presented. (PHR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Developmental Stages, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education
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