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Amanda M. Clevinger; John H. Mace – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2024
Our aim in the current study was to examine how different diary methods might impact the results of involuntary memory studies. We compared three different commonly used diary methods, record all memories experienced per day, record up to two memories per day, or record only the first two per day. Results showed that the record-all group had the…
Descriptors: Journal Writing, Diaries, Personal Narratives, Autobiographies
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Tsai, Pei-Chun; Sachdeva, Chhavi; Gilbert, Sam J.; Scarampi, Chiara – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Saving information onto external resources can improve memory for subsequent information--a phenomenon known as the saving-enhanced memory effect. This article reports two preregistered online experiments investigating (A) whether this effect holds when to-be-remembered information is presented before the saved information and (B) whether people…
Descriptors: Memory, Decision Making, Word Lists, Learning Strategies
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Leggett, Jack M. I.; Burt, Jennifer S.; Carroll, Annemaree – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2019
Review is often more effective when it involves deliberate memory retrieval. However, this advantage may depend on a high rate of retrieval success; students who are less capable with the material may be better served by another activity. In our study, year 9 geography students listened to factual information, then reviewed some of it with a…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Grade 9, High School Students
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Koh, Aloysius Wei Lun; Lee, Sze Chi; Lim, Stephen Wee Hun – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
Teaching educational materials to others enhances the teacher's own learning of those to-be-taught materials, although the underlying mechanisms remain largely unknown. Here, we show that the learning-by-teaching benefit is possibly a retrieval benefit. Learners (a) solved arithmetic problems (i.e., they neither taught nor retrieved;…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Strategies, Memory, Instructional Materials
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Ebersbach, Mirjam; Feierabend, Maike; Nazari, Katharina Barzagar B. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
We compared the long-term effects of generating questions by learners with answering questions (i.e., testing) and restudying in the context of a university lecture. In contrast to previous studies, students were not prepared for the learning strategies, learning content was experimentally controlled, and effects on factual and transfer knowledge…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Recall (Psychology), Testing, Review (Reexamination)