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Matthews, William J. – Cognitive Psychology, 2013
This paper examines the judgment of segmented temporal intervals, using short tone sequences as a convenient test case. In four experiments, we investigate how the relative lengths, arrangement, and pitches of the tones in a sequence affect judgments of sequence duration, and ask whether the data can be described by a simple weighted sum of…
Descriptors: Models, Intervals, Experiments, Theories
Jern, Alan; Kemp, Charles – Cognitive Psychology, 2013
People are capable of imagining and generating new category exemplars and categories. This ability has not been addressed by previous models of categorization, most of which focus on classifying category exemplars rather than generating them. We develop a formal account of exemplar and category generation which proposes that category knowledge is…
Descriptors: Sampling, Probability, Classification, Cognitive Processes
Johns, Brendan T.; Jones, Michael N.; Mewhort, Douglas J. K. – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
We describe a computational model to explain a variety of results in both standard and false recognition. A key attribute of the model is that it uses plausible semantic representations for words, built through exposure to a linguistic corpus. A study list is encoded in the model as a gist trace, similar to the proposal of fuzzy trace theory…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Models, Semantics, Epistemology
Gennari, Silvia P.; Mirkovic, Jelena; MacDonald, Maryellen C. – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
This work investigates production preferences in different languages. Specifically, it examines how animacy, competition processes, and language-specific constraints shape speakers' choices of structure. English, Spanish and Serbian speakers were presented with depicted events in which either an animate or inanimate entity was acted upon by an…
Descriptors: Semantics, Competition, English, Spanish
Oberauer, Klaus; Souza, Alessandra S.; Druey, Michel D.; Gade, Miriam – Cognitive Psychology, 2013
The article investigates the mechanisms of selecting and updating representations in declarative and procedural working memory (WM). Declarative WM holds the objects of thought available, whereas procedural WM holds representations of what to do with these objects. Both systems consist of three embedded components: activated long-term memory, a…
Descriptors: Evidence, Tests, Short Term Memory, Intervals
Vandierendonck, Andre; Demanet, Jelle; Liefooghe, Baptist; Verbruggen, Frederick – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
To account for the findings obtained in voluntary task switching, this article describes and tests the chain-retrieval model. This model postulates that voluntary task selection involves retrieval of task information from long-term memory, which is then used to guide task selection and task execution. The model assumes that the retrieved…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis, Tests
Starns, Jeffrey J.; Ratcliff, Roger; McKoon, Gail – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
We tested two explanations for why the slope of the z-transformed receiver operating characteristic (zROC) is less than 1 in recognition memory: the unequal-variance account (target evidence is more variable than lure evidence) and the dual-process account (responding reflects both a continuous familiarity process and a threshold recollection…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Models, Prediction, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Reingold, Eyal M.; Reichle, Erik D.; Glaholt, Mackenzie G.; Sheridan, Heather – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
Participants' eye movements were monitored in an experiment that manipulated the frequency of target words (high vs. low) as well as their availability for parafoveal processing during fixations on the pre-target word (valid vs. invalid preview). The influence of the word-frequency by preview validity manipulation on the distributions of first…
Descriptors: Evidence, Eye Movements, Validity, Human Body
Schneider, Darryl W.; Anderson, John R. – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
We investigated the time course of associative recognition using the response signal procedure, whereby a stimulus is presented and followed after a variable lag by a signal indicating that an immediate response is required. More specifically, we examined the effects of associative fan (the number of associations that an item has with other items…
Descriptors: Memory, Probability, Investigations, Recognition (Psychology)
Chang, Ya-Ning; Furber, Steve; Welbourne, Stephen – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
There is now considerable evidence showing that the time to read a word out loud is influenced by an interaction between orthographic length and lexicality. Given that length effects are interpreted by advocates of dual-route models as evidence of serial processing this would seem to pose a serious challenge to models of single word reading which…
Descriptors: Evidence, Reading Difficulties, Reading Processes, Influences
Hu, Yi; Ericsson, K. Anders – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
In a recent paper, Hu, Ericsson, Yang, and Lu (2009) found that an ability to memorize very long lists of digits is not mediated by the same mechanisms as exceptional memory for rapidly presented lists, which has been the traditional focus of laboratory research. Chao Lu is the holder of the "Guinness World Record" for reciting the most decimal…
Descriptors: Evidence, Hypermedia, Short Term Memory, Laboratories
Nozari, Nazbanou; Dell, Gary S.; Schwartz, Myrna F. – Cognitive Psychology, 2011
Despite the existence of speech errors, verbal communication is successful because speakers can detect (and correct) their errors. The standard theory of speech-error detection, the perceptual-loop account, posits that the comprehension system monitors production output for errors. Such a comprehension-based monitor, however, cannot explain the…
Descriptors: Verbal Communication, Speech, Linguistics, Aphasia
White, Corey N.; Ratcliff, Roger; Starns, Jeffrey J. – Cognitive Psychology, 2011
The present study tested diffusion models of processing in the flanker task, in which participants identify a target that is flanked by items that indicate the same (congruent) or opposite response (incongruent). Single- and dual-process flanker models were implemented in a diffusion-model framework and tested against data from experiments that…
Descriptors: Identification, Responses, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis
Eriksson, Kimmo; Simpson, Brent – Cognitive Psychology, 2011
This paper introduces a new model to explain perceptions of unfairness in resource allocations between multiple recipients. The model yields several novel predictions, all confirmed in a series of new empirical tests. For instance, while much prior research focuses on the differences between the judge's share and others' shares, we argue that…
Descriptors: Resource Allocation, Models, Perception, Individual Differences
Romani, Cristina; Galluzzi, Claudia; Bureca, Ivana; Olson, Andrew – Cognitive Psychology, 2011
Current models of word production assume that words are stored as linear sequences of phonemes which are structured into syllables only at the moment of production. This is because syllable structure is always recoverable from the sequence of phonemes. In contrast, we present theoretical and empirical evidence that syllable structure is lexically…
Descriptors: Speech, Syllables, Phonemes, Aphasia