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Kuryeong Kim; Qingyun Yu; Susanne Maria Reiterer – Discover Education, 2025
Recent studies have suggested that language aptitude is a domain-general and flexible trait to acquire foreign languages, regarding various cognitive abilities such as memory systems as its crucial components. Despite a growing interest in working memory, however, much remains unknown about the impact of associative memory on language aptitude.…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Second Language Learning, Monolingualism, Language Aptitude
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Sofia Giazitzidou; Kyle Levesque; Hélène Deacon – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
The relation of morphological awareness with reading comprehension is well established. For this advance to inform instruction, the push is now on to understand how morphological awareness is related to reading comprehension. We address this question here by examining potential mechanisms. We do so with children in Grade 1, a time at which it is…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Morphology (Languages), Reading Comprehension
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Ruslimin A.; Yusuf Fuad; Masriyah – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: This study analyzes the commognition of students with low Working Memory Capacity (WMC) when solving calculus problems, particularly in integral material. Commognition, which merges cognition and communication, is explored through four indicators: keywords (stating knowns and unknowns), visual mediators (graphical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Colleges, Undergraduate Students, Mathematics Education
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Zhi Ying Liu; Sook Jhee Yoon – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
Preschool teachers' questioning is an important part of the teaching and learning process as questions can drive children's thinking (Nappi 2017). As one of the most common pedagogical tasks in preschool, storytelling has the potential to bring the world to the classroom using imagined or real stories. However, to date, there is limited knowledge…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
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Arina Shatskaya; Kristina Tarasova; Aleksander Veraksa – Early Child Development and Care, 2025
This study investigates how family cultural capital, particularly through museum and theatre attendance, is related to the cognitive and socio-emotional development of preschool children. The study included 1285 preschoolers (M = 70.6 months, SD = 4.43) and their parents. Assessments were conducted on children's executive functions, non-verbal…
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Cultural Capital, Cognitive Development, Social Development
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Casey Hord; Matthew Christman; Tiffany Berman – Insights into Learning Disabilities, 2025
As they progress to more abstract and complex levels of mathematics, students with learning disabilities (and other students who are struggling with mathematics) can face challenges related to memory and cognition, as well as potential difficulties with math anxiety. For example, quadratic functions can present several challenges for many…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Learning Disabilities, At Risk Students, Mathematics Education
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Yim, Hyungwook; Dennis, Simon J.; Sloutsky, Vladimir M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Models of statistical learning do not place constraints on the complexity of the memory structure that is formed during statistical learning, while empirical studies using the statistical learning task have only examined the formation of simple memory structures (e.g., two-way binding). On the contrary, the memory literature, using explicit memory…
Descriptors: Incidental Learning, Barriers, Memory, Difficulty Level
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Gross, Marina P.; Dobbins, Ian G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Under cognitive load theory, time pressure/urgency-induced arousal is a major contributor to pupil dilation during cognition. However, pupillometric encoding studies have failed to consider the possible role of time pressure/urgency effects, instead often assuming that encoding dilations directly reflect encoding strength. To isolate possible…
Descriptors: Memory, Physiology, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
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Del Missier, Fabio; Stragà, Marta; Visentini, Mimì; Munaretto, Giulio; Mäntylä, Timo – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Research on prospective memory has paid no attention to the way in which the intentions to be remembered are framed. In two studies on time-based prospective memory, participants had to remember multiple delayed intentions framed as time rules (i.e., respond every 7 min, every 10 min) or as a series of corresponding instances (i.e., respond at…
Descriptors: Intention, Memory, Time Perspective, Cognitive Processes
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Papesh, Megan H.; Hout, Michael C.; Guevara Pinto, Juan D.; Robbins, Arryn; Lopez, Alexis – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
Domain-specific expertise changes the way people perceive, process, and remember information from that domain. This is often observed in visual domains involving skilled searches, such as athletics referees, or professional visual searchers (e.g., security and medical screeners). Although existing research has compared expert to novice performance…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Eye Movements, Expertise, Cognitive Processes
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Trawinski, Tobiasz; Aslanian, Araz; Cheung, Olivia S. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
Previous research has established a possible link between recognition performance, individuation experience, and implicit racial bias of other-race faces. However, it remains unclear how implicit racial bias might influence other-race face processing in observers with relatively extensive experience with the other race. Here we examined how…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Human Body, Race, Experience
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Bisaz, Reto; Bessières, Benjamin; Miranda, Janelle M.; Travaglia, Alessio; Alberini, Cristina M. – Learning & Memory, 2021
Episodic memories formed during infancy are rapidly forgotten, a phenomenon associated with infantile amnesia, the inability of adults to recall early-life memories. In both rats and mice, infantile memories, although not expressed, are actually stored long term in a latent form. These latent memories can be reinstated later in life by certain…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Infants, Long Term Memory, Adults
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Hernández-Matias, Arturo; Bermúdez-Rattoni, Federico; Osorio-Gómez, Daniel – Learning & Memory, 2021
It has been reported that during chemotherapy treatment, some patients can experience nausea before pharmacological administration, suggesting that contextual stimuli are associated with the nauseating effects. There are attempts to reproduce with animal models the conditions under which this phenomenon is observed to provide a useful paradigm for…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Animals, Drug Therapy, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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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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