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Nathan W. Whitmore; Erika M. Yamazaki; Ken A. Paller – npj Science of Learning, 2024
When memories are reactivated during sleep, they are potentially transformed and strengthened. However, disturbed sleep may make this process ineffective. In a prior study, memories formed shortly before sleep were weakened by auditory stimulation when that stimulation provoked memory reactivation while also disrupting sleep -- a procedure known…
Descriptors: Memory, Sleep, Retention (Psychology), Recall (Psychology)
C. J. Brainerd; M. Chang; D. M. Bialer; X. Liu – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
We report the first evidence that the gist mechanism of fuzzy-trace theory and the associative mechanism of activation monitoring theory operate in parallel, in the recall version of the Deese/Roediger/McDermott illusion. In three experiments, we implemented a new methodology that allows their respective empirical indexes, gist strength (GS) and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Recall (Psychology), Associative Learning, Association (Psychology)
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)
Janice Attard-Johnson; Olivia Dark; Ebony Murray; Sarah Bate – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
The interplay between facial age and facial identity is evident from several scenarios experienced in daily life, such as when recognising a face several decades after the last exposure. However, the link between age and identity processing, and how age perception abilities might diverge in individuals with different face processing abilities, has…
Descriptors: Physical Characteristics, Recognition (Psychology), Identification, Perceptual Impairments
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)
Greving, Sven; Lenhard, Wolfgang; Richter, Tobias – Teaching of Psychology, 2023
Background: Retrieval practice promotes retention of learned information more than restudying the information. However, benefits of multiple-choice testing over restudying in real-world educational contexts and the role of practically relevant moderators such as feedback and learners' ability to retrieve tested content from memory (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Testing, Feedback (Response), Memory
Yadi Yu; Wenbo Zhao; Anran Li; David R. Shanks; Xiao Hu; Liang Luo; Chunliang Yang – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Retrieval practice is well-established as a powerful tool for reinforcing long-term learning. Most previous research has concentrated on the effectiveness of overt retrieval, involving recalling information from memory and generating overt responses by writing, typing, or speaking aloud the retrieved information. Here we ask whether covert…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Learning Strategies, Meta Analysis
Laurence B. Leonard; Patricia Deevy; Sharon L. Christ; Jeffrey D. Karpicke; Justin B. Kueser; Kaitlyn Fischer – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2024
A B S T R A CT Purpose: Retrieval practice has been shown to assist the word learning of children with developmental language disorder (DLD). Although this has been true for learning new verbs as well as new nouns and adjectives, these children's overall verb learning has remained quite low. In this preregistered study, we presented novel verbs in…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Developmental Disabilities, Verbs, Syntax
Kavya Thakore; Trisha Das; Shamma Jahan; Naomi Sweller – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Narrative recall and comprehension are important lifelong skills. While gesturing may improve recall by alleviating cognitive load, it may be differentially beneficial, depending on task and individual characteristics. While research on gesture's effects on a variety of task modalities is burgeoning, effects on recall of narratives read aloud are…
Descriptors: College Students, Recall (Psychology), Nonverbal Communication, Individual Characteristics
Yuxuan Lian; Shamali Ahati; Jiarui Cai; Jingwen Li; Huan Zhang; Tour Liu – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2025
In cognitive psychology, researchers have identified a phenomenon called socially shared retrieval-induced forgetting (SS-RIF) that occurs during collaborative memory tasks in groups. When a speaker selectively retrieves target information, listeners may forget related, non-target information. The mechanism likely involves concurrent covert…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Cooperative Learning, Memory, Recall (Psychology)
Alex Barrett; Nuodi Zhang; Shiyao Wei – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Immersive learning is predominantly constrained to technology-based interventions but has the potential for more diverse applications. This study reports on an experiment investigating the learning affordances of psychological immersion evoked by narrative absorption. A total of 228 participants were randomly assigned to one of three forms of…
Descriptors: Memorization, Recall (Psychology), Learning Experience, Imagery
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)
Ruoyu Lu; Yinuo Xu; Jiyu Xu; Tengfei Wang; Zhi Li – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Free time in a working memory task often improves the recall performances of the to-be-remembered items. It is still debated whether the free-time effect in working memory is purely proactive, purely retroactive, or both proactive and retroactive. In the present study, we used the single-gap paradigm to explore this question. In Experiment 1, we…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Foreign Countries, Short Term Memory, Time Perspective
Mollie Hamilton; Tessyia Roper; Erik Blaser; Zsuzsa Kaldy – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Proactive interference (PI) occurs when previously learned memories compete with currently relevant information. Despite extensive literature investigating the effect in adults, little work has been done in young children. In three preregistered studies (N = 38, 35, 172; convenience samples from the Northeastern United States), first, we showed…
Descriptors: Interference (Learning), Cognitive Ability, Recall (Psychology), Retention (Psychology)
Nicholas P. Maxwell; Mark J. Huff – Metacognition and Learning, 2024
Judgments of learning (JOLs) are often reactive on memory for cue-target pairs. This pattern, however, is moderated by relatedness, as related but not unrelated pairs often show a memorial benefit compared to a no-JOL control group. Based on Soderstrom et al.'s, "Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition" 41,…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Recall (Psychology), Cues, Cognitive Processes