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Showing 1,771 to 1,785 of 2,063 results Save | Export
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Luciana, Monica; Conklin, Heather M.; Hooper, Catalina J.; Yarger, Rebecca S. – Child Development, 2005
The prefrontal cortex modulates executive control processes and structurally matures throughout adolescence. Consistent with these events, prefrontal functions that demand high levels of executive control may mature later than those that require working memory but decreased control. To test this hypothesis, adolescents (9 to 20 years old)…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Spatial Ability, Recognition (Psychology), Memory
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Hadwin, Julie A.; Brogan, Joanna; Stevenson, Jim – Educational Psychology, 2005
This study investigated the effect of individual differences in state anxiety on tasks tapping the central executive, phonological, and visuo-spatial components of working memory (WM). It was designed to test Eysenck and Calvo's processing efficiency theory (PET) which suggests that the phonological and executive components of WM may be important…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Short Term Memory, Individual Differences, Cognitive Processes
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Whitehouse, Andrew J. O.; Maybery, Murray T.; Durkin, Kevin – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
When pictures and words are presented serially in an explicit memory task, recall of the pictures is superior. While this effect is well established in the adult population, little is known of the development of this picture-superiority effect in typical development. This task was administered to 80 participants from middle childhood to…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Task Analysis, Pictorial Stimuli, Children
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Coull, Greig J.; Leekam, Susan R.; Bennett, Mark – Social Development, 2006
This study investigated how 4- to 7-year-old children's second-order belief attribution might be facilitated by either reducing information processing or varying the sequence of task questions. In Experiment 1, compared with Perner and Wimmer's (1985) original second-order false-belief task, a new task with reduced information-processing demands…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Attribution Theory, Beliefs
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Owen, William J.; Borowsky, Ron; Sarty, Gordon E. – Brain and Language, 2004
Previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have investigated the role of phonological processing by utilizing nonword rhyming decision tasks (e.g., Pugh et al., 1996). Although such tasks clearly engage phonological components of visual word recognition, it is clear that decision tasks are more cognitively involved than the…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Validity, Phonology, Models
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Wallsten, Thomas S.; Pleskac, Timothy J.; Lejuez, C. W. – Psychological Review, 2005
This article models the cognitive processes underlying learning and sequential choice in a risk-taking task for the purposes of understanding how they occur in this moderately complex environment and how behavior in it relates to self-reported real-world risk taking. The best stochastic model assumes that participants incorrectly treat outcome…
Descriptors: Modeling (Psychology), Probability, Cognitive Processes, Adolescents
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Iarocci, Grace; Burack, Jacob A. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2004
The focus of the present study was to examine covert orienting responses to peripheral flash cues among children with autism in a situation where attentional processes were taxed by the presence of distractors in the visual field. Fourteen children with autism (MA = 6-7 years) were compared to their MA-matched peers without autism on a forced…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Cues, Children, Autism
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Oberle, Crystal D.; McBeath, Michael K.; Madigan, Sean C.; Sugar, Thomas G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
This research introduces a new naive physics belief, the Galileo bias, whereby people ignore air resistance and falsely believe that all objects fall at the same rate. Survey results revealed that this bias is held by many and is surprisingly strongest for those with formal physics instruction. In 2 experiments, 98 participants dropped ball pairs…
Descriptors: Physics, Cognitive Processes, Influences, Bias
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Bish, Joel P.; Ferrante, Samantha M.; McDonald-McGinn, Donna; Zackai, Elaine; Simon, Tony J. – Developmental Science, 2005
Using an adaptation of the Attentional Networks Test, we investigated aspects of executive control in children with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (DS22q11.2), a common but not well understood disorder that produces non-verbal cognitive deficits and a marked incidence of psychopathology. The data revealed that children with DS22q11.2…
Descriptors: Schizophrenia, Conflict, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Psychopathology
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Freeman, Norman H.; Hood, Bruce M.; Meehan, Caroline – Developmental Science, 2004
When preschoolers overcome persistent error, subsequent patterns of correct choices may identify how the error had been overcome. Children who no longer misrepresented a ball rolling down a bent tube as though it could only fall vertically, were asked sometimes to approach and sometimes to avoid where the ball landed. All children showed requisite…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Children, Physics, Error Correction
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Kannass, Kathleen N.; Oakes, Lisa M.; Shaddy, D. Jill – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2006
We longitudinally investigated the development of endogenous control of attention in 2 types of tasks that involve competition for attentional focus at 7, 9, and 31 months of age. At all 3 sessions, children participated in a multiple object free play task and a distractibility task. The results revealed both developmental differences and…
Descriptors: Play, Attention Control, Infants, Longitudinal Studies
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Coltman, Penny – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2006
This paper presents the findings of a study exploring the self-regulated use of mathematical metalanguage in the early years. Young children were filmed on two occasions in the naturalistic context of their eight foundation stage settings, including both nursery and reception classes. The children were engaged in mathematical activities designed…
Descriptors: Young Children, Metacognition, Developmental Stages, Cognitive Processes
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Riggs, Kevin J.; McTaggart, James; Simpson, Andrew; Freeman, Richard P. J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
Using the Luck and Vogel change detection paradigm, we sought to investigate the capacity of visual working memory in 5-, 7-, and 10-year-olds. We found that performance on the task improved significantly with age and also obtained evidence that the capacity of visual working memory approximately doubles between 5 and 10 years of age, where it…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Short Term Memory, Children, Models
DuBois, David A.; And Others – 1995
Clear descriptions of job expertise are required to support applications and improvements in personnel training and job performance. This report describes a practical approach to task analysis that integrates the issues, content, and methods of cognitive science and personnel psychology. Cognitively oriented task analysis employs a breadth, then…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Job Analysis, Personnel Evaluation, Protocol Analysis
Panter, Abigail T.; And Others – 1987
Cognitive-based approaches to social and personality psychology have studied the structure of trait constructs in memory. The bipolar view of traits suggests that the activation of a trait construct such as "hostile" should be associated with the simultaneous activation of its semantic opposite "kind." The unipolar view, in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, College Students, Difficulty Level
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