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Hughes, Robert W.; Vachon, Francois; Jones, Dylan M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
The disruption of short-term memory by to-be-ignored auditory sequences (the changing-state effect) has often been characterized as attentional capture by deviant events (deviation effect). However, the present study demonstrates that changing-state and deviation effects are functionally distinct forms of auditory distraction: The disruption of…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Experiments
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Liu, Chang Hong; Ward, James; Markall, Helena – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
Research on face recognition has mainly relied on methods in which observers are relatively passive viewers of face stimuli. This study investigated whether active exploration of three-dimensional (3D) face stimuli could facilitate recognition memory. A standard recognition task and a sequential matching task were employed in a yoked design.…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Recognition (Psychology), Memory
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Rotter, Kathleen M. – TEACHING Exceptional Children Plus, 2009
The essence of teaching is, in fact, creating new memories for your students. The teacher's role is to help students store the correct information (memories) in ways that make recall and future access and use likely. Therefore, choosing techniques to enhance memory is possibly the most critical aspect of instructional design. COMPOSE is an acronym…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Memory, Teaching Skills, Recall (Psychology)
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van Asselen, Marieke; Kessels, Roy P. C.; Frijns, Catharina J. M.; Kappelle, L. Jaap; Neggers, Sebastiaan F. W.; Postma, Albert – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Object-location memory is an important form of spatial memory, comprising different subcomponents that each process specific types of information within memory, i.e. remembering objects, remembering positions and binding these features in memory. In the current study we investigated the neural correlates of binding categorical (relative) or…
Descriptors: Patients, Memory, Neurological Impairments, Spatial Ability
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Wagner, Dylan D.; Sziklas, Viviane; Garver, Krista E.; Jones-Gotman, Marilyn – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Mnemonic deficits in patients with medial temporal lobe (MTL) damage arising from temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) are traditionally constrained to long-term episodic memory, sparing short-term and working memory (WM). This view of WM as being independent of MTL structures has recently been challenged by a small number of patient and neuroimaging…
Descriptors: Patients, Short Term Memory, Brain, Spatial Ability
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Gilchrist, Amanda L.; Cowan, Nelson; Naveh-Benjamin, Moshe – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
Child development is accompanied by a robust increase in immediate memory. This may be due to either an increase in the number of items (chunks) that can be maintained in working memory or an increase in the size of those chunks. We tested these hypotheses by presenting younger and older children (7 and 12 years of age) and adults with different…
Descriptors: Sentences, Word Lists, Age Differences, Short Term Memory
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Berland, Jody – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2009
Chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFE/ME) is an invisible disability that forces researchers to delineate new boundaries between illness and impairment, and between medical knowledge and patients' experience. As a neurological impairment, this condition attacks memory and cognition, which paradoxically become the focus of…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Patients, Memory, Special Needs Students
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Makovski, Tal; Jiang, Yuhong V. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
When tracking moving objects in space humans usually attend to the objects' spatial locations and update this information over time. To what extent do surface features assist attentive tracking? In this study we asked participants to track identical or uniquely colored objects. Tracking was enhanced when objects were unique in color. The benefit…
Descriptors: College Students, Short Term Memory, Eye Movements, Visual Perception
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Chaumon, Maximilien; Schwartz, Denis; Tallon-Baudry, Catherine – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Oscillatory synchrony in the gamma band (30-120 Hz) has been involved in various cognitive functions including conscious perception and learning. Explicit memory encoding, in particular, relies on enhanced gamma oscillations. Does this finding extend to unconscious memory encoding? Can we dissociate gamma oscillations related to unconscious…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Memory, Learning Processes, Role
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El-Farargy, Nancy – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2009
New chemistry materials were devised for pre university National Certificate (NC) nursing students studying chemistry at a further education college. Previously, preliminary work showed that students felt that the chemistry taught to them was irrelevant, boring and difficult. It was hoped that through an applications-led style curriculum…
Descriptors: Nursing Students, Nursing Education, Nurses, Adult Education
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Evans, Karen M.; Federmeier, Kara D. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Hemispheric differences in the use of memory retrieval cues were examined in a continuous recognition design, using visual half-field presentation to bias the processing of test words. A speeded recognition task revealed general accuracy and response time advantages for items whose test presentation was biased to the left hemisphere. A second…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cues, Diagnostic Tests, Reaction Time
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Singh, Leher; Nestor, Sarah; Parikh, Chandni; Yull, Ashley – Infancy, 2009
When addressing infants, many adults adopt a particular type of speech, known as infant-directed speech (IDS). IDS is characterized by exaggerated intonation, as well as reduced speech rate, shorter utterance duration, and grammatical simplification. It is commonly asserted that IDS serves in part to facilitate language learning. Although…
Descriptors: Infants, Word Recognition, Long Term Memory, Verbal Stimuli
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DeJong, Joy; Donders, Jacobus – Assessment, 2009
The latent structure of the California Verbal Learning Test-Second Edition (CVLT-II) was examined in a clinical sample of 223 persons with traumatic brain injury that had been screened to remove individuals with complicating premorbid (e.g., psychiatric) or comorbid (e.g., financial compensation seeking) histories. Analyses incorporated the…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Verbal Learning, Verbal Tests, Neurological Impairments
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Martin, Andrea E.; McElree, Brian – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Comprehension of verb-phrase ellipsis (VPE) requires reevaluation of recently processed constituents, which often necessitates retrieval of information about the elided constituent from memory. A. E. Martin and B. McElree (2008) argued that representations formed during comprehension are content addressable and that VPE antecedents are retrieved…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Stimuli, Verbs, Memory
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Delaney, Peter F.; Verkoeijen, Peter P. J. L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Using 5 experiments, the authors explored the dependency of spacing effects on rehearsal patterns. Encouraging rehearsal borrowing produced opposing effects on mixed lists (containing both spaced and massed repetitions) and pure lists (containing only one or the other), magnifying spacing effects on mixed lists but diminishing spacing effects on…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Experiments, Recognition (Psychology), Experimental Psychology
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