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Showing 1 to 15 of 114 results Save | Export
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Caitlin A. Sisk; Vanessa G. Lee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Throughout prolonged tasks, visual attention fluctuates temporally in response to the present stimuli, task demands, and changes in available attentional resources. This temporal fluctuation has downstream effects on memory for stimuli presented during the task. Researchers have established that detection of a target (e.g., a square of a color to…
Descriptors: Adults, Memory, Interference (Learning), Recall (Psychology)
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Shruthi Sukhadev Jarali – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2024
The various ways in which forgetting, an inherent component of the human memory process, occurs are essential for understanding cognitive function and memory control. This paper investigates the main categories of forgetting, including retrieval failure, decay, interference, motivated or conscious forgetting, and encoding failures. Retrieval…
Descriptors: Memory, Mnemonics, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology)
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Dillon H. Murphy; Shawn T. Schwartz; Alan D. Castel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Value-directed remembering refers to the tendency to best remember important information at the expense of less valuable information, and this ability may draw on strategic attentional processes. In six experiments, we investigated the role of attention in value-directed remembering by examining memory for important information under conditions of…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology)
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Mulligan, Neil W.; Buchin, Zachary L.; West, John T. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Memory retrieval affects subsequent memory in ways both positive (e.g., the testing effect) and negative (e.g., retrieval-induced forgetting, RIF). The changes to memory that retrieval produces can be thought of as the encoding consequences of retrieval, examined here with respect to attention. In three experiments, participants first studied…
Descriptors: Attention, Testing, Recall (Psychology), Memory
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Mulligan, Neil W.; Spataro, Pietro; Rossi-Arnaud, Clelia; Wall, Avery R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Stimuli presented with targets during a monitoring task are better remembered than stimuli presented with distractors, a result referred to as the attentional boost effect (ABE). The ABE is consistently found for item memory, but conflicting results have been reported for different assessments of associative memory, with studies of source memory…
Descriptors: Attention, Memory, Associative Learning, Interference (Learning)
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Lange-Küttner, Christiane; Collins, Chenelle L.; Ahmed, Rahima K.; Fisher, Lauren E. – Developmental Psychology, 2023
The relation between perceptual and conceptual knowledge is a longstanding research question in developmental psychology. Here we tested children's dependence on figurative information with a reaction time/accuracy task. A sample of 151 children from 5 to 10 years were assessed from two multicultural and multiracial schools in the London (UK)…
Descriptors: Children, Memory, Visual Perception, Reaction Time
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Michael Batashvili; Rona Sheaffer; Maya Katz; Yoav Doron; Noam Kempler; Daniel A. Levy – npj Science of Learning, 2022
Studies of reconsolidation interference posit that reactivation of a previously consolidated memory via a reminder brings it into an active, labile state, leaving it open for potential manipulation. If interfered with, this may disrupt the original memory trace. While evidence for pharmacological reconsolidation interference is widespread, it…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Interference (Learning), Cognitive Processes
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Ju, Jangkyu; Cho, Yang Seok – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Previous studies on value-driven attentional capture (VDAC) have demonstrated that the uncertainty of reward value modulates attentional allocation via associative learning. However, it is unclear whether such attentional exploration is executed based on the amount of potential reward information available for refining value prediction or the…
Descriptors: Attention, Attention Control, Rewards, Associative Learning
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Dorien Ceuleers; Sofie Degeest; Freya Swinnen; Nele Baudonck; Katrien Kestens; Ingeborg Dhooge; Hannah Keppler – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of the current study was to assess dual-task interference (i.e., changes between the dual-task and baseline condition) in a listening effort dual-task paradigm in normal-hearing (NH) adults, hearing aid (HA) users, and cochlear implant (CI) users. Method: Three groups of 31 participants were included: (a) NH adults, (b) HA…
Descriptors: Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Assistive Technology, Adults
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Pazdera, Jesse K.; Kahana, Michael J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
The modality effect refers to the robust finding that memory performance differs for items presented aurally, as compared with visually. Whereas auditory presentation leads to stronger recency performance in immediate recall, visual presentation often produces better primacy performance (the inverse modality effect). To investigate and model these…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Aural Learning, Visual Learning
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Yang, Chunliang; Zhao, Wenbo; Luo, Liang; Sun, Bukuan; Potts, Rosalind; Shanks, David R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
An emerging body of studies demonstrates that practicing retrieval of studied information, by comparison with restudying or no treatment, can facilitate subsequent learning and retrieval of new information, a phenomenon termed the 'forward testing effect' (FTE) or 'test-potentiated new learning." Several theoretical explanations have been…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Processes, Memory, Retention (Psychology)
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Kubik, Veit; Koslowski, Kenneth; Schubert, Torsten; Aslan, Alp – Metacognition and Learning, 2022
Interim tests of previously studied information can potentiate subsequent learning of new information, in part, because retrieval-based processes help to reduce proactive interference from previously learned information. We hypothesized that an effect similar to this forward testing effect would also occur when making judgments of (prior) learning…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Decision Making, Interference (Learning), Learning Processes
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Tuyuan Cheng – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2023
The relationship between working memory (WM) and language processing has been extensively investigated in cognitive research. Previous studies mostly obtain evidence from measuring the involvement of WM in complex syntactic structures reported with well-established processing asymmetry, e.g., relative clauses (RCs) in English. Rarely considered is…
Descriptors: Memory, Interference (Learning), Short Term Memory, Language Processing
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Greene, Nathaniel R.; Martin, Benjamin A.; Naveh-Benjamin, Moshe – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Dividing attention (DA) between a memory task and a secondary task results in deficits in memory performance across a wide array of memory tasks, but these effects are larger when DA occurs at encoding than at retrieval. Although some research suggests the effects of DA are equal for item and associative memory, thereby suggesting that DA disrupts…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Undergraduate Students
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Besken, Miri; Mulligan, Neil W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Ancient as well as modern writers have promoted the idea that bizarre images enhance memory. Research has documented bizarreness effects, with one standard technique finding that sentences describing unusual, implausible, or bizarre scenarios are better remembered than sentences describing plausible, every day, or common scenarios. Not…
Descriptors: Memory, Visual Stimuli, Visualization, Cognitive Processes
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