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Durand, Marianne; Hulme, Charles; Larkin, Rebecca; Snowling, Margaret – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
A range of possible predictors of arithmetic and reading were assessed in a large sample (N=162) of children between ages 7 years 5 months and 10 years 4 months. A confirmatory factor analysis of the predictors revealed a good fit to a model consisting of four latent variables (verbal ability, nonverbal ability, search speed, and phonological…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Reading Skills, Predictor Variables, Children
Malmberg, Kenneth J.; Holden, Jocelyn E.; Shiffren, Richard M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Judgments of frequency for targets (old items) and foils (similar; dissimilar) steadily increase as the number of times a target is studied increases, but discrimination of targets from similar foils does not steadily improve, a phenomenon termed registration without learning (D. L. Hintzman & T. Curran, 1995; D. L. Hintzman, T. Curran, & B. Oppy,…
Descriptors: Word Frequency, Drills (Practice), Word Recognition, Cognitive Processes
Botvinick, Matthew; Bylsma, Lauren M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Previous research has shown that short-term memory for serial order can be influenced by background knowledge concerning regularities of sequential structure. Specifically, it has been shown that recall is superior for sequences that fit well with familiar sequencing constraints. The authors report a corresponding effect pertaining to serial…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Short Term Memory, Prior Learning, Sequential Learning
Lea, R. Brooke; Mulligan, Elizabeth J.; Walton, Jennifer Lee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
According to current psychological models of deduction, people can draw inferences on the basis of information that they receive from different sources at different times. In 3 reading-comprehension experiments, the authors demonstrated that premises that appear far apart in a text (distant) are not accessed and are therefore not used as a basis…
Descriptors: Inferences, Reading Comprehension, Memory, Psychological Studies
Farrington-Flint, Lee; Wood, Clare; Canobi, Katherine H.; Faulkner, Dorothy – Journal of Research in Reading, 2004
Despite compelling evidence that analogy skills are available to beginning readers, few studies have actually explored the possibility of identifying individual differences in young children's analogy skills in early reading. The present study examined individual differences in children's use of orthographic and phonological relations between…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Logical Thinking, Young Children, Thinking Skills
Kane, Michael J.; Hambrick, David Z.; Tuholski, Stephen W.; Wilhelm, Oliver; Payne, Tabitha W.; Engle, Randall W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
A latent-variable study examined whether verbal and visuospatial working memory (WM) capacity measures reflect a primarily domain-general construct by testing 236 participants in 3 span tests each of verbal WM. visuospatial WM, verbal short-term memory (STM), and visuospatial STM. as well as in tests of verbal and spatial reasoning and general…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Memory, Factor Analysis, Attention Control
Ravaja, Niklas; Kallinen, Kari; Saari, Timo; Keltikangas-Jarvinen, Liisa – Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied, 2004
The authors examined the effects of suboptimally presented facial expressions on emotional and attentional responses and memory among 39 young adults viewing video (business news) messages from a small screen. Facial electromyography (EMG) and respiratory sinus arrhythmia were used as physiological measures of emotion and attention, respectively.…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Recognition (Psychology), Videotape Recordings, Visual Perception
Badian, Nathlie A. – Annals of Dyslexia, 2005
In this study, visual-orthographic skills were defined as the ability to recognize whether letters and numerals are correctly oriented. Aims were to investigate whether visual-orthographic skills would contribute independent variance to reading, and whether children with a visual-orthographic deficit would be more impaired readers than similar…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Reading Skills, Reading Difficulties, Short Term Memory
Chiat, Shula – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
In line with the original presentation of nonword repetition as a measure of phonological short-term memory (Gathercole & Baddeley, 1989), the theoretical account Gathercole (2006) puts forward in her Keynote Article focuses on phonological storage as the key capacity common to nonword repetition and vocabulary acquisition. However, evidence that…
Descriptors: Evidence, Phonology, Short Term Memory, Vocabulary Development
Hay, Emma; Moran, Catherine – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2005
In this study, narrative and expository discourse-retelling abilities were compared in 9 children with closed head injury (CHI) age 9;5-15;3 (years;months) and 9 typically developing age-matched peers. Narrative and expository retellings were analyzed according to language variables (i.e., number of words, number of T-units, and sentential…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Head Injuries, Short Term Memory, Early Adolescents
Wang, Lijuan; Kliegel, Matthias; Yang, Zhiliang; Liu, Wei – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2006
In the present study, the authors explored age differences in event-based prospective memory (PM) across adolescence. The tasks consisted of an ongoing task (OT; i.e., personality questionnaire items, math problems) and an embedded prospective task that required participants to remember to make a special response whenever they encountered a PM cue…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Age Differences, Memory
Solomon, Eric S.; Pearlmutter, Neal J. – Cognitive Psychology, 2004
Five experiments, using a subject-verb agreement error elicitation procedure, investigated syntactic planning processes in production. The experiments examined the influence of semantic integration--the degree to which phrases are tightly linked at the conceptual level--and contrasted two accounts of planning: serial stack-based systems and…
Descriptors: Interference (Language), Stimuli, Semantics, Nouns
Rawson, Katherine A. – Cognitive Psychology, 2004
A prevalent assumption in text comprehension research is that many aspects of text processing are automatic, with automaticity typically defined in terms of properties (e.g., speed and effort). The present research advocates conceptualization of automaticity in terms of underlying mechanisms and evaluates two such accounts, a…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Word Processing, Sentence Structure, Concept Formation
Hayne, Harlene – Developmental Review, 2004
When asked to recall their earliest personal memories, most children and adults have virtually no recollection of their infancy or early childhood. This phenomenon is commonly referred to as childhood amnesia. The fate of our earliest memories has puzzled psychologists for over 50 years, particularly in light of the importance of early experience…
Descriptors: Infants, Memory, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology
Kliegel, Matthias; Eschen, Anne; Thone-Otto, Angelika I. T. – Brain and Cognition, 2004
The realization of delayed intentions (i.e., prospective memory) is a highly complex process composed of four phases: intention formation, retention, re-instantiation, and execution. The aim of this study was to investigate if executive functioning impairments are related to problems in the formation, re-instantiation, and execution of a delayed…
Descriptors: Head Injuries, Neurological Impairments, Aging (Individuals), Intention

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