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Ecker, Ullrich K. H.; Maybery, Murray; Zimmer, Hubert D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013
There is ongoing debate concerning the mechanisms of feature binding in working memory. In particular, there is controversy regarding the extent to which these binding processes are automatic. The present article demonstrates that binding mechanisms differ depending on whether the to-be-integrated features are perceived as forming a coherent…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Color, Geometric Concepts, Cognitive Processes
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Smith, J. David; Coutinho, Mariana V. C.; Church, Barbara A.; Beran, Michael J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013
The uncertainty response has been influential in studies of human perception, and it is crucial in the growing research literature that explores animal metacognition. However, the uncertainty response's interpretation is still sharply debated. The authors sought to clarify this interpretation using the dissociative technique of cognitive loads…
Descriptors: Primatology, Metacognition, Executive Function, Attention
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Foulsham, Tom; Kingstone, Alan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013
Many modern theories propose that perceptual information is represented by the sensorimotor activity elicited by the original stimulus. Scanpath theory (Noton & Stark, 1971) predicts that reinstating a sequence of eye fixations will help an observer recognize a previously seen image. However, the only studies to investigate this are…
Descriptors: Memory, Theories, Eye Movements, Recognition (Psychology)
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Topolinski, Sascha – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
The sensorimotor contributions to memory for prior occurrence were investigated. Previous research has shown that both implicit memory and familiarity draw on gains in stimulus-related processing fluency for old, compared with novel, stimuli, but recollection does not. Recently, it has been demonstrated that processing fluency itself resides in…
Descriptors: Neuropsychology, Psychomotor Skills, Memory, Familiarity
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McVay, Jennifer C.; Kane, Michael J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Some people are better readers than others, and this variation in comprehension ability is predicted by measures of working memory capacity (WMC). The primary goal of this study was to investigate the mediating role of mind-wandering experiences in the association between WMC and normal individual differences in reading comprehension, as predicted…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Reading Comprehension, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
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Swallow, Khena M.; Zacks, Jeffrey M.; Abrams, Richard A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
Memory for naturalistic events over short delays is important for visual scene processing, reading comprehension, and social interaction. The research presented here examined relations between how an ongoing activity is perceptually segmented into events and how those events are remembered a few seconds later. In several studies, participants…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Processes, Perception, Short Term Memory
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Oberauer, Klaus; Lewandowsky, Stephan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013
The article tests the assumption that forgetting in working memory for verbal materials is caused by time-based decay, using the complex-span paradigm. Participants encoded 6 letters for serial recall; each letter was preceded and followed by a processing period comprising 4 trials of difficult visual search. Processing duration, during which…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Recall (Psychology), Maintenance, Models
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Fenn, Kimberly M.; Hambrick, David Z. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Decades of research have established that "online" cognitive processes, which operate during conscious encoding and retrieval of information, contribute substantially to individual differences in memory. Furthermore, it is widely accepted that "offline" processes during sleep also contribute to memory performance. However, the question of whether…
Descriptors: Correlation, Memory, Sleep, Individual Differences
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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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D'Argembeau, Arnaud; Mathy, Arnaud – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
The ability to mentally simulate possible futures ("episodic future thinking") is of fundamental importance for various aspects of human cognition and behavior, but precisely how humans construct mental representations of future events is still essentially unknown. We suggest that episodic future thoughts consist of transitory patterns…
Descriptors: Semantics, Prompting, Cognitive Processes, Simulation
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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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Vul, Edward; Hanus, Deborah; Kanwisher, Nancy – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
Theories of probabilistic cognition postulate that internal representations are made up of multiple simultaneously held hypotheses, each with its own probability of being correct (henceforth, "probability distributions"). However, subjects make discrete responses and report the phenomenal contents of their mind to be all-or-none states rather than…
Descriptors: Attention, Probability, Inferences, Experimental Psychology
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Van Boven, Leaf; White, Katherine; Huber, Michaela – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
People tend to perceive immediate emotions as more intense than previous emotions. This "immediacy bias" in emotion perception occurred for exposure to emotional but not neutral stimuli (Study 1), when emotional stimuli were separated by both shorter (2 s; Studies 1 and 2) and longer (20 min; Studies 3, 4, and 5) delays, and for emotional…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Cognitive Processes, Pictorial Stimuli, Memory
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Chein, Jason M.; Fiez, Julie A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2010
Working memory is believed to play a central role in almost all domains of higher cognition, yet the specific mechanisms involved in working memory are still fiercely debated. We describe a neuroimaging experiment with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and a companion behavioral experiment, and in both we seek to adjudicate between…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Recall (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Diagnostic Tests
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