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Boucher, Jill – British Journal of Psychology, 1981
Autistic children were compared with matched controls on immediate recall of word lists. Overall performance was very similar. However the autistic subjects recalled significantly fewer earlier presented and more later presented items than did controls. This finding is discussed in relation to the memory disabilities of adults suffering from…
Descriptors: Adults, Autism, Children, Comparative Testing
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Boykin, A. Wade; Harackiewicz, Judith – British Journal of Psychology, 1981
High school and college students solved problems differing in level of uncertainty; their expressed curiosity about the correct answer was gauged; and later recognition of correct answers tested. Both epistemic curiosity and recognition bore monotonically increasing relationships to degree of uncertainty. Systematic intersubject differences in…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Curiosity, Guessing (Tests), Individual Differences
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Adams-Webber, J. – British Journal of Psychology, 1978
This research examines further the hypothesis that subjects tend to allot figures to the negative poles of constructs approximately 38 percent of the time. Sixty Canadian undergraduates judged 20 nonsense words as if these were the names of persons on 20 bipolar constructs. Results clearly supported the hypothesis. (Author)
Descriptors: Bias, College Students, Negative Attitudes, Questionnaires
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Ashton, Roderick; White, Kenneth D. – British Journal of Psychology, 1980
When scores from a modified (modification affecting response bias) Sheehan/Betts imagery questionnaire were reanalyzed, previous findings--that females report more vivid imagery than males--were not confirmed. It is argued that previously reported sex differences may be artificial in so far as imagery vividness scores are concerned. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Imagery, Response Style (Tests), Sex Differences
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Fluck, Michael; Hewison, Yvonne – British Journal of Psychology, 1979
Critics assert that Piaget's tests seriously underestimate operational thinking by failing to consider experimenter and presentation variables. This experiment studied the impact of these social influences on number conservation performance. Subjects viewed videotapes in which the task was presented by an adult or by puppets. Presentation mode…
Descriptors: Conservation (Concept), Experimenter Characteristics, Number Concepts, Response Style (Tests)
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Rabbitt, Patrick – British Journal of Psychology, 1979
In these choice response keyboard tasks, older subjects detected and corrected their errors as efficiently as the young. Reaction time (RT) for error and error correction responses remained relatively constant with increasing age while RTs for correct responses and other, arbitrary, error-signaling responses markedly increased. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Error Patterns, Geriatrics
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Dewart, M. Hazel – British Journal of Psychology, 1979
Children aged six and eight were required to recall transitive sentences, some with an animate actor and inanimate acted-upon element, and some with these reversed. It appeared that children prefer to put the animate noun first and this affects their choice of active or passive sentence voice. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary School Students, Language Patterns, Language Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
O'Hare, David – British Journal of Psychology, 1979
This study indicated that the dimensions of the configuration provided by INDSCAL multidimensional scaling are psychologically relevant to learning the concept of artistic style and that sensitivity to these dimensions, as measured by INDSCAL subject weights, can predict important individual differences in responses to another group of stimuli.…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Expression, Concept Formation, Dimensional Preference