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Lam, Elizabeth A.; McMaster, Kristen L. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 2014
The purpose of this review was to update previous reviews on factors related to students' responsiveness to early literacy intervention. The 14 studies in this synthesis used experimental designs, provided small-group or one-on-one reading interventions, and analyzed factors related to responsiveness to those interventions. Participants were…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Early Intervention, Emergent Literacy, Longitudinal Studies
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Howe, Mark L.; Rabinowitz, F. Michael – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1989
Argues that dual-task performance is currently not interpretable because several compatible hypotheses have been offered to account for dual-task interference. Demonstrates inability to discriminate among alternative hypotheses by constructing a model which includes limited resources and response competition and requires running at least eight…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Memory, Models, Performance Factors
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Schutte, Anne R.; Spencer, John P. – Child Development, 2002
Tested predictions of dynamic field theory in study of 3-year-olds' location memory errors in task with homogeneous task space. Found that young children's spatial memory responses are affected by delay- and experience-dependent processes as well as the geometric structure of the task space. Both dynamic field theory and category adjustment models…
Descriptors: Bias, Cognitive Development, Error Patterns, Memory
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Brainerd, C. J.; Stein, L. M.; Reyna, V. F. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Presents a conjoint recognition paradigm and a model that quantifies conscious and unconscious memory for learned materials and for the types of unlearned materials found to induce false memories in children. Validation study showed that model accounted for 7- and 10-year-olds' performance on recognition memory task. Conscious and unconscious…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Memory
Smith, Susan B.; And Others – 1988
In response to empirical evidence that suggests that children use more than one strategy in transitive inference tasks, an effort was made to model strategy development as it occurs under the dual constraints of a concept of order and task demands. In the model, when a task is presented, procedural memory is searched for a strategy that is…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Experiential Learning, Individual Development
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Koriat, Asher; Goldsmith, Morris; Schneider, Wolfgang; Nakash-Dura, Michal – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Three experiments examined children's strategic regulation of memory accuracy. Found that younger (7 to 9 years) and older (10 to 12 years) children could enhance the accuracy of their testimony by screening out wrong answers under free-report conditions. Findings suggest a developmental trend in level of memory accuracy actually achieved.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Processes, Memory
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Howe, Mark L. – Developmental Psychology, 2002
Examined effects of interfering information and instructions to forget on preschoolers' and kindergartners' story retention. Found that retroactive interference affected preschoolers' storage- and retrieval-based forgetting rates and kindergartners' storage-based forgetting rates. Intentional forgetting reduced retroactive interference primarily…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Inhibition, Kindergarten Children, Memory
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Barreau, Sofka; Morton, John – Cognition, 1999
Two experiments used Headed Records memory model to examine preschoolers' performance on a variation of Perner's Smarties task, a false-beliefs test. Data indicated that when the computational demands imposed by the original task are reduced, young children can and do remember what they had thought about the contents of a tube even after its true…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
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Gagne, Ellen D. – Review of Educational Research, 1978
Variables affecting long-term retention are examined: (1) learner history--including ability, prior knowledge and self-confidence; (2) events (teaching techniques) occurring immediately before reading; (3) events occurring during reading; and (4) events in the retention interval, particularly practice effects. The ACT associationist model is used…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Learning Processes, Learning Theories, Literature Reviews
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Courage, Mary L.; Howe, Mark L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Examined effect of familiarization on 3.5-month-olds' retention of visual stimuli with varying delay times. Found support for retention models in which direction of attentional preferences (novel, familiar, or null) depends on memory accessibility. Short lookers showed better retention over time than long lookers, indicating that much of the…
Descriptors: Attention, Familiarity, Individual Differences, Infant Behavior
White, Richard T. – 1979
This paper discusses questions pertinent to a definition of cognitive structure as the knowledge one possesses and the manner in which it is arranged, and considers how to select or devise methods of describing cognitive structure. The main purpose in describing cognitive structure is to see whether differences in memory (or cognitive structure)…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Structures, Instruction
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Reyna, Valerie F.; Holliday, Robyn; Marche, Tammy – Developmental Review, 2002
Reviews explanatory dimensions of children's false memory relevant to forensic practice: measurement, development, social factors, individual differences, varieties of memories and memory judgments, and varieties of procedures inducing false memories. Asserts that recent studies fail to use techniques that separate acquiescence from memory…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Evidence (Legal), Individual Development
Klahr, David – 1981
Preschool children's problem solving processes are investigated in both direct and indirect ways. Direct investigations focus on substantive and methodological issues related to how children solve a few well defined puzzles, such as the Tower of Hanoi and the Tangram. Indirect investigations deal with related issues: U-shaped (or non-monotone)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Memory, Models
Leshowitz, Barry; And Others – 1974
A series of experiments are described which were conducted to further refine experimental paradigms for the investigation of information processing skills relevant to pilot training. A series of tasks have been developed and studied which attempt to measure the individual's information processing capacity as well as his susceptibility to…
Descriptors: Armed Forces, Auditory Discrimination, Conceptual Schemes, Flight Training
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Robinson, Peter – Language Learning, 1995
Reviews research on the nature of attention and memory and proposes a model of the relationship between them during second-language acquisition complementary to Schmidt's noticing hypothesis and oppositional to Krashen's dual-system hypothesis. The article maintains that differential performance on implicit and explicit learning and memory…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, College Students
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