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Kelly, Laura Jane; Heit, Evan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
How does the concurrent use of language affect perception and memory for exemplars? Labels cue more general category information than a specific exemplar. Applying labels can affect the resulting memory for an exemplar. Here 3 alternative hypotheses are proposed for the role of labeling an exemplar at encoding: (a) labels distort memory toward the…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Memory, Cues, Hypothesis Testing
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Bayram, Ece; Aydin, Özgür; Ergenc, Hacer Iclal; Akbostanci, Muhittin Cenk – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2017
In this study we present a picture database of 160 nouns and 160 verbs. All verbs and nouns are divided into two groups as action and non-action words. Age of acquisition, familiarity, imageability, name agreement and complexity norms are reported alongside frequency, word length and morpheme count for each word. Data were collected from 600…
Descriptors: Verbs, Nouns, Databases, Pictorial Stimuli
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Faber, Myrthe; Gennari, Silvia P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
The field of psychology of time has typically distinguished between prospective timing and retrospective duration estimation: in prospective timing, participants attend to and encode time, whereas in retrospective estimation, estimates are based on the memory of what happened. Prior research on prospective timing has primarily focused on…
Descriptors: Memory, Psychology, Statistical Analysis, Time Management
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Morera, Yurena; León, José A.; Escudero, Inmaculada; de Vega, Manuel – Discourse Processes: A multidisciplinary journal, 2017
Continuity and discontinuity are sometimes marked in discourse by means of connectives. This study tested for the first time whether causal and concessive connectives induce expectations of emotional continuity and discontinuity, respectively. Using a novel double-task paradigm, participants first listened to an antecedent clause with a causal or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Psychology, Visual Stimuli
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Ayneto, Alba; Sebastian-Galles, Nuria – Developmental Science, 2017
Bilingual infants show an extended period of looking at the mouth of talking faces, which provides them with additional articulatory cues that can be used to boost the challenging situation of learning two languages (Pons, Bosch & Lewkowicz, 2015). However, the eye region also provides fundamental cues for emotion perception and recognition,…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Infants, Cues, Visual Stimuli
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Ong, Jia Hoong; Burnham, Denis; Stevens, Catherine J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
Because different musical scales use different sets of intervals and, hence, different musical pitches, how do music listeners learn those that are in their native musical system? One possibility is that musical pitches are acquired in the same way as phonemes, that is, via distributional learning, in which learners infer knowledge from the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Teaching Methods, Acoustics, Music Activities
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Vincent, Irena – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2017
Purpose: Research on language planning in adult stuttering is relatively sparse and offers diverging arguments about a potential causative relationship between semantic and phonological encoding and fluency breakdowns. This study further investigated semantic and phonological encoding efficiency in adults who stutter (AWS) by means of silent…
Descriptors: Semantics, Phonology, Cognitive Processes, Adults
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Sheehan, Mark; Davison, Martyn – London Review of Education, 2017
This article examines the extent to which young people in New Zealand share the dominant beliefs and assumptions that inform contemporary notions of war remembrance concerning the First World War. In particular, it considers how they make meaning of the ANZAC/Gallipoli narrative. Informed by two empirical studies, it questions whether young people…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Beliefs, Attitudes
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Ghanouni, Parisa; Memari, Amir-Hossein; Gharibzadeh, Shahriar; Eghlidi, Jandark; Moshayedi, Pouria – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2017
This study was aimed to investigate the effects of social versus non-social stimuli on postural responses in 21 boys with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (mean age of 11.6 ± 1.5) compared with 30 typically developing (TD) boys (mean age of 11.7 ± 1.8). Postural control of children was examined while they were standing on a force plate and viewing…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Males, Children
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Lew, Adina R.; Howe, Mark L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
Events consist of diverse elements, each processed in specialized neocortical networks, with temporal lobe memory systems binding these elements to form coherent event memories. We provide a novel theoretical analysis of an unexplored consequence of the independence of memory systems for elements and their bindings, 1 that raises the paradoxical…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Memory, Recall (Psychology), Accuracy
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Jon M. Wargo – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2017
Purpose: Plugging into the multimodal aesthetics of youth lifestreaming, this article examines how three lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and/or queer (LGBTQ) youths use digital media production as an activist practice toward cultural justice work. Focusing on the queer rhetorical dimensions of multimodal (counter)storytelling, the…
Descriptors: Activism, Youth, LGBTQ People, Social Justice
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Patel, Rupal; Reilly, Kevin J.; Archibald, Erin; Cai, Shanqing; Guenther, Frank H. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2015
Purpose: Responses to intensity perturbation during running speech were measured to understand whether prosodic features are controlled in an independent or integrated manner. Method: Nineteen English-speaking healthy adults (age range = 21-41 years) produced 480 sentences in which emphatic stress was placed on either the 1st or 2nd word. One…
Descriptors: Speech, Auditory Stimuli, Feedback (Response), Suprasegmentals
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Warren, David E.; Duff, Melissa C.; Cohen, Neal J.; Tranel, Daniel – Learning & Memory, 2015
The hippocampus has recently been implicated in the brief representation of visual information, but its specific role is not well understood. We investigated this role using a paradigm that distinguishes quantity and quality of visual memory as described in a previous study. We found that amnesic patients with bilateral hippocampal damage (N = 5)…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Visual Stimuli, Role, Memory
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Leaf, Justin B.; Cihon, Joseph H.; Ferguson, Julia L.; Leaf, Ronald; McEachin, John – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2019
This study compared no-no prompt to flexible prompt fading to teach four children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder expressive labels. Using an adapted alternating treatment design, we evaluated the effectiveness of both systems to teach each participant to expressively label 10 pictures of athletes. The researchers evaluated the…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Children
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van Borsel, John; D'haeseleer, Lien – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2019
The Process Density Index (PDI), originally developed by Edwards, is a potentially useful metric for assessing phonological development that is based on the average number of phonological process applications per word in a speech sample. The purpose of the present study was to gather PDI reference data for Dutch-speaking children. Speech samples…
Descriptors: Phonology, Indo European Languages, Indexes, Speech Communication
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