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Ferrante, Donatella; Girotto, Vittorio; Straga, Marta; Walsh, Clare – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013
Current views of hypothetical thinking implicitly assume that the content of imaginary thoughts about the past and future should be the same. Two experiments show that, given the same experienced facts of reality, future imagination may differ from past reconstruction. When participants failed a task, their counterfactual thoughts focused on…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Imagination, Simulation, Time
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Bijleveld, Erik; Custers, Ruud; Aarts, Henk – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
When in pursuit of rewards, humans weigh the value of potential rewards against the amount of effort that is required to attain them. Although previous research has generally conceptualized this process as a deliberate calculation, recent work suggests that rudimentary mechanisms--operating without conscious intervention--play an important role as…
Descriptors: Priming, Rewards, Psychological Studies, Experiments
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Hard, Bridgette Martin; Recchia, Gabriel; Tversky, Barbara – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
How do people understand the everyday, yet intricate, behaviors that unfold around them? In the present research, we explored this by presenting viewers with self-paced slideshows of everyday activities and recording looking times, subjective segmentation (breakpoints) into action units, and slide-to-slide physical change. A detailed comparison of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Activities, Eye Movements, Attention
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Kinoshita, Sachiko; Mozer, Michael C.; Forster, Kenneth I. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
In reaction time research, there has been an increasing appreciation that response-initiation processes are sensitive to recent experience and, in particular, the difficulty of previous trials. From this perspective, the authors propose an explanation for a perplexing property of masked priming: Although primes are not consciously identified,…
Descriptors: Priming, Reaction Time, Difficulty Level, Cognitive Processes
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Healey, M. Karl; Hasher, Lynn; Danilova, Elena – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
Schmeichel (2007) reported that performing an initial task before completing a working memory span task can lower span scores and suggested that the effect was due to depleted cognitive resources. We showed that the detrimental effect of prior tasks depends on a match between the stimuli used in the span task and the preceding task. A task…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Verbal Ability
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Hills, Thomas T.; Todd, Peter M.; Goldstone, Robert L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2010
The trade-off between exploration and exploitation is common to a wide variety of problems involving search in space and mind. The prevalence of this trade-off and its neurological underpinnings led us to propose domain-general cognitive search processes (Hills, Todd, & Goldstone, 2008). We propose further that these are consistent with the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Priming, Problem Solving, Goal Orientation
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Bilalic, Merim; Langner, Robert; Erb, Michael; Grodd, Wolfgang – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2010
Comparing experts with novices offers unique insights into the functioning of cognition, based on the maximization of individual differences. Here we used this expertise approach to disentangle the mechanisms and neural basis behind two processes that contribute to everyday expertise: object and pattern recognition. We compared chess experts and…
Descriptors: Expertise, Pattern Recognition, Cognitive Processes, Recognition (Psychology)
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Willemsen, Martijn C.; Bockenholt, Ulf; Johnson, Eric J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
Loss aversion and reference dependence are 2 keystones of behavioral theories of choice, but little is known about their underlying cognitive processes. We suggest an additional account for loss aversion that supplements the current account of the value encoding of attributes as gains or losses relative to a reference point, introducing a value…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Self Efficacy
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Kool, Wouter; McGuire, Joseph T.; Rosen, Zev B.; Botvinick, Matthew M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2010
Behavioral and economic theories have long maintained that actions are chosen so as to minimize demands for exertion or work, a principle sometimes referred to as the "law of less work". The data supporting this idea pertain almost entirely to demands for physical effort. However, the same minimization principle has often been assumed also to…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Selection, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
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Oberauer, Klaus; Bialkova, Svetlana – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
Processing information in working memory requires selective access to a subset of working-memory contents by a focus of attention. Complex cognition often requires joint access to 2 items in working memory. How does the focus select 2 items? Two experiments with an arithmetic task and 1 with a spatial task investigate time demands for successive…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Attention, Experiments, Repetition
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Calder, Andrew J.; Jenkins, Rob; Cassel, Anneli; Clifford, Colin W. G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2008
To date, there is no functional account of the visual perception of gaze in humans. Previous work has demonstrated that left gaze and right gaze are represented by separate mechanisms. However, these data are consistent with either a multichannel system comprising separate channels for distinct gaze directions (e.g., left, direct, and right) or an…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Visual Perception, Eye Movements, Models
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Smith, J. David; Redford, Joshua S.; Haas, Sarah M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2008
The authors analyze the shape categorization of rhesus monkeys ("Macaca mulatta") and the role of prototype- and exemplar-based comparison processes in monkeys' category learning. Prototype and exemplar theories make contrasting predictions regarding performance on the Posner-Homa dot-distortion categorization task. Prototype theory--which…
Descriptors: Classification, Animals, Role, Comparative Analysis
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Eder, Andreas B.; Rothermund, Klaus – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2008
Affective-mapping effects between affective stimuli and lever movements are critically dependent upon the evaluative meaning of the response labels that are used in the task instructions. In Experiments 1 and 2, affective-mapping effects predicted by specific-muscle-activation and distance-regulation accounts were replicated when the standard…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Psychomotor Skills, Cognitive Mapping
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Johns, Michael; Inzlicht, Michael; Schmader, Toni – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2008
Research shows that stereotype threat reduces performance by diminishing executive resources, but less is known about the psychological processes responsible for these impairments. The authors tested the idea that targets of stereotype threat try to regulate their emotions and that this regulation depletes executive resources, resulting in…
Descriptors: Stereotypes, Cognitive Processes, Anxiety, Cognitive Ability
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Huber, David E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2008
Three forced-choice perceptual word identification experiments tested the claim that transitions from positive to negative priming as a function of increasing prime duration are due to cognitive aftereffects. These aftereffects are similar in nature to perceptual aftereffects that produce a negative image due to overexposure and habituation to a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Habituation, Cognitive Processes, Cues
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