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Dodier, Olivier; Patihis, Lawrence – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
We examined the incidence of recovered memories of child abuse in a large French general public sample (N = 3346). Of the 905 (27% of total sample) who reported having memories of abuse, 211 (23%) reported recovered memories of child abuse that they had no previous memory of, with 82 of these (9% of the 905) reporting that they did not know they…
Descriptors: Incidence, Memory, Child Abuse, Recall (Psychology)
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Yang, Chunliang; Yu, Rongjun; Hu, Xiao; Luo, Liang; Huang, Tina S.-T.; Shanks, David R. – Metacognition and Learning, 2021
Judgments of learning (JOLs) play a fundamental role in helping learners regulate their study strategies but are susceptible to various kinds of illusions and biases. These can potentially impair learning efficiency, and hence understanding the mechanisms underlying the formation of JOLs is important. Many studies have suggested that both…
Descriptors: Learning, Evaluative Thinking, Beliefs, Cognitive Processes
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Reeders, Puck C.; Hamm, Amanda G.; Allen, Timothy A.; Mattfeld, Aaron T. – Learning & Memory, 2021
Remembering sequences of events defines episodic memory, but retrieval can be driven by both ordinality and temporal contexts. Whether these modes of retrieval operate at the same time or not remains unclear. Theoretically, medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) confers ordinality, while the hippocampus (HC) associates events in gradually changing…
Descriptors: Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diagnostic Tests, Task Analysis
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Gottfried, Michael A.; Ansari, Arya – Elementary School Journal, 2021
Of all elementary school years, absenteeism is at its peak during kindergarten. Although much has been established about the effects of missing kindergarten school days on achievement, nothing has yet been established on absenteeism and executive function (EF) skills. Yet developing EF skills early in school is critical, and missed in-school time…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Attendance, Executive Function
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Geurten, Marie; Willems, Sylvie; Lloyd, Marianne – Child Development, 2021
We tested whether changes in attribution processes could account for the developmental differences observed in how children's use fluency to guide their memory decisions. Children ranging in age from 4 to 9 years studied a list of familiar or unfamiliar cartoon characters. In Experiment 1 (n = 84), participants completed a recognition test during…
Descriptors: Young Children, Attribution Theory, Memory, Recognition (Psychology)
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Mackey, Margaret – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
This article presents a small case study of two childhood readers of Enid Blyton's Famous Five series, who meet in a research project devoted to a different but related topic. One is Indian by birth and background, the other, Canadian. Their experience of this series is separated by distance (many thousands of miles), time of reading (nearly fifty…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Reader Response, Fiction, Memory
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Scholz, Sebastian; Dutke, Stephan – European Journal of Psychology and Educational Research, 2021
Teachers often face complex educational judgments and research has shown that teachers are prone to be influenced by unrelated information in their judgments and decisions. To investigate the influence of potential misinformation we employed a list-method directed forgetting paradigm and investigated a simulated judgment scenario, in which…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Memory, Track System (Education), College Students
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Roberts, Kim P.; Wood, Katherine R.; Wylie, Breanne E. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
One of the many sources of information easily available to children is the internet and the millions of websites providing accurate, and sometimes inaccurate, information. In the current investigation, we examined children's ability to use credibility information about websites when learning about environmental sustainability. In two studies,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Memory, Metacognition, Critical Reading
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Martin, Kiley; Musaus, Madeline; Navabpour, Shaghayegh; Gustin, Aspen; Ray, W. Keith; Helm, Richard F.; Jarome, Timothy J. – Learning & Memory, 2021
Strong evidence supports a role for protein degradation in fear memory formation. However, these data have been largely done in only male animals. Here, we found that following contextual fear conditioning, females, but not males, had increased levels of proteasome activity and K48 polyubiquitin protein targeting in the dorsal hippocampus, the…
Descriptors: Fear, Memory, Gender Differences, Animals
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Vergauwe, Evie; Besch, Vincent; Latrèche, Caren; Langerock, Naomi – Developmental Science, 2021
The capacity of working memory is limited and undergoes important developmental changes during childhood. One proposed reason for the expansion of working memory capacity during childhood is the emergence and increased efficiency of active maintenance mechanisms, such as that of refreshing. Refreshing is a proposed mechanism to keep information…
Descriptors: Attention, Short Term Memory, Children, Child Development
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Ohito, Esther O. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2021
I engage Black feminist thought in this genre-blending text to further theorize "Black feminist memory work," a visual research tool for embodied reflexivity. Using my lived experience surviving bereavement, I demonstrate how Black feminist thought--as anchored to the concepts of creation, improvisation, and memory--shaped the…
Descriptors: African Americans, Feminism, Reflection, Memory
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Ding, Zhuolei; Jiang, Ting; Chen, Chuansheng; Murty, Vishnu P.; Xue, Jingming; Zhang, Mingxia – Learning & Memory, 2021
Recent studies have revealed that memory performance is better when participants have the opportunity to make a choice regarding the experimental task (choice condition) than when they do not have such a choice (fixed condition). These studies, however, used intentional memory tasks, leaving open the question whether the choice effect also applies…
Descriptors: Memory, Decision Making, Intention, Incidental Learning
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Lancry-Dayan, Oryah C.; Nahari, Tal; Ben-Shakhar, Gershon; Pertzov, Yoni – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Through a series of studies, we investigate how people direct gaze toward familiar and unfamiliar objects. When an observer tries to encode objects, gaze is first directed preferentially to the familiar object followed by a later prioritization of the unfamiliar ones. We demonstrate that the initial preference reflects prioritization of personally…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Familiarity, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Preferences
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Flint, Maureen A. – Critical Studies in Education, 2021
In higher education, the place of the college campus, as a site of experiences, histories, symbols, and encounters, has important implications for student outcomes. However, the place of campus is often treated as a static or neutral site -- a black box within which student outcomes such as belongingness occur. This article argues that excavating…
Descriptors: Campuses, Colleges, Memory, Racial Bias
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Na'puti, Tiara R.; Dionne, T. Jake – Communication Teacher, 2021
Courses: Rhetorical Criticism, Cultural Rhetorics, Public Memory Studies. Objective: This activity introduces undergraduates to ideological criticism as a method of rhetorical criticism by illustrating the co-constitutive nature of ideology and rhetoric to universities occupying colonized lands, waters, and airways.
Descriptors: Rhetorical Criticism, Ideology, Undergraduate Students, College Instruction
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