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Marini, Anthony E. – B. C. Journal of Special Education, 1990
The verbal encoding ability of 24 students (ages 14-20) with learning disabilities (LD) was compared to that of 24 non-learning-disabled subjects. LD subjects did not show a release from proactive interference, suggesting that such students are less likely to encode the phonetic features of words or use a phonetic code in short-term memory.…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Learning Disabilities, Phonetics, Recall (Psychology)
Carvajal, Howard; And Others – Diagnostique, 1989
Forty-five gifted children, ages 11-17, were tested with the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale and the Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement. Results indicated 18 of 20 correlations between the area and composite scores were significant. The Stanford-Binet Short-Term Memory standard age score mean was lower than other scores' means. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Achievement Tests, Comparative Analysis, Correlation
Clark, Diane – 1989
Prior studies have often confounded linguistic and perceptual performance when evaluating deaf subjects' skills, a confusion that may be responsible for results indicating lesser recall ability among the deaf. In this series of studies this linguistic/perceptual confound was investigated in both the iconic and short term memory of deaf…
Descriptors: Cognitive Tests, Comparative Analysis, Deafness, Evaluation Problems
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Siegel, Linda S.; Linder, Bruce A. – Developmental Psychology, 1984
Compares performance of 172 children aged 7 to 13 years on tasks involving visual or auditory presentation of rhyming and nonrhyming letters and an oral or written response. Results indicate insensitivity to phonological similarity for young children with disabilities; sensitivity improves with age, but deficits in short-term memory remain at…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Arithmetic, Children, Cognitive Processes
Greene, Elinor C.; And Others – 1987
This research compared the effects of a televised presentation and a picture book on children's recall of specific verbal and visual content using 48 third-grade students in Florida as subjects. The children were first stratified by sex and then randomly assigned to view the same story in either a picture book with audiotape or a televised…
Descriptors: Audiotape Recordings, Aural Learning, Comparative Analysis, Educational Television
Torello, Michael W., Jr.; And Others – 1984
Until recently it has been possible only to measure the behavioral products of cognitive processing, e.g. reaction time. However, this is a rather indirect way of studying brain substrates of cognition. Psychophysiological techniques can be used to study the neural mechanisms of cognition. In this experiment brain electrical activity was measured…
Descriptors: Adults, Attention Span, Biofeedback, Clinical Diagnosis
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Moore, David M. – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 1986
This study examined the effects of undergraduate students' cognitive style on short term recall of content information from still projected visuals of different sizes (full, one half, one quarter frame) and types (paintings, photographs, line drawings). No significant differences in the mean scores of field dependent and independent subjects was…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Field Dependence Independence, Higher Education, Psychological Studies
Newhouse, Barbara S. – 1987
Differences between interactive microcomputer and traditional verbal learning groups in a paired-associate learning task were examined in this study. The 88 subjects, who were undergraduate education students, were randomly assigned to four groups. Each group was given one of two lists of ten high frequency words matched with either high or low…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Conventional Instruction, Drills (Practice)