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Moretti, Luca; Koch, Iring; Steinhauser, Marco; Schuch, Stefanie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Studies of switching between tasks and studies of error commission have both provided solid behavioral measures of executive control. Nonetheless, a gap remains between these strands of research. In three experiments we sought to reduce this gap by assessing the impact of task errors on N-2 repetition costs, an effect supposedly related to…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Error Patterns, Cognitive Ability, Attention Control
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Forthmann, Boris; Oyebade, Oluwatosin; Ojo, Adebusola; Günther, Fritz; Holling, Heinz – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2019
Scoring divergent-thinking response sets has always been challenging because such responses are not only open-ended in terms of number of ideas, but each idea may also be expressed by a varying number of concepts and, thus, by a varying number of words (elaboration). While many current studies have attempted to score the semantic distance in…
Descriptors: Semantics, Creative Thinking, Simulation, Correlation
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Daliri, Ayoub – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2021
Purpose: The speech motor system uses feedforward and feedback control mechanisms that are both reliant on prediction errors. Here, we developed a state-space model to estimate the error sensitivity of the control systems. We examined (a) whether the model accounts for the error sensitivity of the control systems and (b) whether the two systems…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Psychomotor Skills, Prediction, Error Patterns
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Metcalfe, Janet; Finn, Bridgid – Learning and Instruction, 2012
Three experiments investigated whether the hypercorrection effect--the finding that errors committed with high confidence are easier, rather than more difficult, to correct than are errors committed with low confidence--occurs in grade school children as it does in young adults. All three experiments showed that Grade 3-6 children hypercorrected…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Self Efficacy, Elementary School Students, Knowledge Level
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Steinhauser, Marco; Hubner, Ronald – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The hypothesis is introduced that 1 source of shift costs is the strengthening of task-related associations occurring whenever an overt response is produced. The authors tested this account by examining shift effects following errors and error compensation processes. The authors predicted that following a specific type of error, called task…
Descriptors: Responses, Error Correction, Association (Psychology), Task Analysis