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Miller, Paul – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2005
In this study, the author elucidated whether reading experience continues to contribute to word recognition skills in readers with well-internalized reading skills. The participants performed consecutive same or different judgments regarding the identicalness of letters, words, and pseudohomophones. For a more detailed examination of how increased…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reading Skills, Alphabets, Word Recognition
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Romero, Fernando; Paris, Scott G.; Brem, Sarah K. – Current Issues in Education, 2005
We examined underlying mechanisms for comprehension differences across expository and narrative text while controlling for factors confounded in the extant literature. Fourth grade students (n=32) read both an expository and a narrative text, and completed both a local comprehension assessment, and a global retelling assessment for each text.…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Grade 4, Psycholinguistics, Models
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O'Reilly-Scanlon, Kathleen; Crowe, Christine; Weenie, Angelina – McGill Journal of Education, 2004
"Wahkohtowin," a Cree word meaning kinship or the state of being related, is a fundamental concept for understanding Indigenous culture and traditional beliefs (Ermine 2001). This article describes how three researchers in western Canada incorporated this concept into a research project that compared Indigenous and non-Indigenous…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Foreign Countries, Cross Cultural Studies, Reading Attitudes
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Porat, Dan A. – American Educational Research Journal, 2004
A group of Israeli high school students (h = 11) from two socially distinct schools read aloud a textbook account of a 1920 bloody encounter between Jews and Arabs. The study aimed at examining the relation between the textbook account and the students' formation of historical perceptions. Prior to reading the textbook excerpts, students wrote…
Descriptors: Conflict, Foreign Countries, High School Students, Textbooks
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te Nijenhuis, Jan; Resing, Wilma; Tolboom, Elsbeth; Bleichrodt, Nico – Intelligence, 2004
The predictive validity and utility of assessment procedures can be increased by adding predictors to the prediction supplied by general ability tests. Of Jensen's early work comes the suggestion of focusing on the cognitive ability short-term memory (STM), especially for low-"g" Black children. Meta-analysis convincingly shows high…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Predictor Variables, Academic Achievement, Immigrants
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Swingley, Daniel – Cognitive Psychology, 2005
Infants parse speech into word-sized units according to biases that develop in the first year. One bias, present before the age of 7 months, is to cluster syllables that tend to co-occur. The present computational research demonstrates that this statistical clustering bias could lead to the extraction of speech sequences that are actual words,…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Statistical Bias, Syllables
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Liss, Miriam; Saulnier, Celine; Fein, Deborah; Kinsbourne, Marcel – Autism: The International Journal of Research & Practice, 2006
Individuals with autistic spectrum disorders (ASDs) often experience, describe and exhibit unusual patterns of sensation and attention. These anomalies have been hypothesized to result from overarousal and consequent overfocused attention. Parents of individuals with ASD rated items in three domains, "sensory overreactivity",…
Descriptors: Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Memory, Behavior Rating Scales, Multivariate Analysis
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Goodson, Ivor; Moore, Shawn; Hargreaves, Andy – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2006
Purpose: This article focuses on the sustainability of reform through the lens of teachers' nostalgia--the major form of memory among a demographically dominant cohort of experienced older teachers. Unwanted change evokes senses of nostalgia for these lost missions that take two forms: social and political. As teachers age, their responses to…
Descriptors: Memory, Teachers, Educational Change, Aging (Individuals)
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Vuckovich, Joseph A.; Semel, Mara E.; Baxter, Mark G. – Learning & Memory, 2004
A recent study suggests that lesions to all major areas of the cholinergic basal forebrain in the rat (medial septum, horizontal limb of the diagonal band of Broca, and nucleus basalis magnocellularis) impair a spatial working memory task. However, this experiment used a surgical technique that may have damaged cerebellar Purkinje cells. The…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Animals, Short Term Memory, Spatial Ability
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Cahill, Larry; Uncapher, Melina; Kilpatrick, Lisa; Alkire, Mike T.; Turner, Jessica – Learning & Memory, 2004
The amygdala appears necessary for enhanced long-term memory associated with emotionally arousing events. Recent brain imaging investigations support this view and indicate a sex-related hemispheric lateralization exists in the amygdala relationship to memory for emotional material. This study confirms and further explores this finding. Healthy…
Descriptors: Arousal Patterns, Emotional Response, Neurology, Investigations
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Maldonado, Hector; Romano, Arturo; Merlo, Emiliano; Freudenthal, Ramiro – Learning & Memory, 2005
Several studies support that stored memories undergo a new period of consolidation after retrieval. It is not known whether this process, termed reconsolidation, requires the same transcriptional mechanisms involved in consolidation. Increasing evidence supports the participation of the transcription factor NF-[Kappa]B in memory. This was…
Descriptors: Molecular Biology, Recall (Psychology), Long Term Memory, Animals
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Pendley, Julia D.; Myers, Carl L.; Brown, Reagan D. – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2004
The primary purpose of this study was to test two hypotheses proposed by Bracken and McCallum (1998), authors of the Universal Nonverbal Intelligence Test (UNIT), as to how children diagnosed with ADHD would perform on the UNIT. Twenty-nine students between the ages of 5 and 17 years were administered the extended battery of the UNIT twice, with…
Descriptors: Intelligence Quotient, Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders, Intelligence Tests
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Brouwers, Symen A.; Mishra, Ramesh C.; van de Vijver, Fons J. R. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2006
The confounding of chronological and educational age and of schooling and socioeconomic status are persistent problems in the study of the cognitive consequences of schooling. The educational system among the Kharwar in India provides a natural experiment to overcome these problems, since it shows neither source of confounding. The sample…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Factor Structure, Foreign Countries, Cognitive Development
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Lundberg, Ingvar; Sterner, Gorel – Annals of Dyslexia, 2006
A sample of 60 children in Grade 3 was followed over one year. In the first year, an extensive battery of assessments was used including aspects of reading, arithmetic, and working memory. Teachers rated the children on 7-point scales on various motivational dimensions summarized to a total score tentatively called task orientation. In the…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Grade 4, Elementary School Students, Short Term Memory
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Wagner, Barry T.; Jackson, Heather M. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2006
Purpose: This study examined the cognitive demands of 2 selection techniques in augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), direct selection, and visual linear scanning, by determining the memory retrieval abilities of typically developing children when presented with fixed communication displays. Method: One hundred twenty typical children…
Descriptors: Memory, Kindergarten, Augmentative and Alternative Communication, Models
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