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Ariel, Robert; Dunlosky, John; Bailey, Heather – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
Theories of self-regulated study assume that learners monitor item difficulty when making decisions about which items to select for study. To complement such theories, the authors propose an agenda-based regulation (ABR) model in which learners' study decisions are guided by an agenda that learners develop to prioritize items for study, given…
Descriptors: Test Items, Time Management, Item Analysis, Rewards
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Spitzer, Bernhard; Hanslmayr, Simon; Opitz, Bertram; Mecklinger, Axel; Bauml, Karl-Heinz – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Retrieval practice on a subset of previously studied material enhances later memory for practiced material but can inhibit memory for related unpracticed material. The present study examines the effects of prior retrieval practice on evoked (ERPs) and induced (oscillatory power) measures of electrophysiological activity underlying recognition of…
Descriptors: Memory, Correlation, Diagnostic Tests, Physiology
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Spencer, Rebecca M. C.; Ivry, Richard B. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Cerebellar pathology is associated with impairments on a range of motor learning tasks including sequence learning. However, various lines of evidence are at odds with the idea that the cerebellum plays a central role in the associative processes underlying sequence learning. Behavioral studies indicate that sequence learning, at least with short…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Brain, Learning, Motion
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Wimber, Maria; Rutschmann, Roland Marcus; Greenlee, Mark W.; Bauml, Karl-Heinz – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Selectively retrieving a target memory among related memories requires some degree of inhibitory control over interfering and competing memories, a process assumed to be supported by inhibitory mechanisms. Evidence from behavioral studies suggests that such inhibitory control can lead to subsequent forgetting of the interfering information, a…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests
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Lim, Chun; Alexander, Michael P. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Memory impairments are common after stroke, and the anatomical basis for impairments may be quite variable. To determine the range of stroke-related memory impairment, we identified all case reports and group studies through the Medline database and the Science Citation Index. There is no hypothesis about memory that is unique to stroke, but there…
Descriptors: Memory, Etiology, Neurological Impairments, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Bissett, Patrick G.; Nee, Derek Evan; Jonides, John – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The ability to mitigate interference is of central importance to cognition. Previous research has provided conflicting accounts about whether operations that resolve interference are singular in character or form a family of functions. Here, the authors examined the relationship between interference-resolution processes acting on working memory…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Responses
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Prehn-Kristensen, Alexander; Goder, Robert; Chirobeja, Stefania; Bressman, Inka; Ferstl, Roman; Baving, Lioba – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
Although the consolidation of several memory systems is enhanced by sleep in adults, recent studies suggest that sleep supports declarative memory but not procedural memory in children. In the current study, the influence of sleep on emotional declarative memory (recognition task) and procedural memory (mirror tracing task) in 20 healthy children…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Memory, Sleep, Children
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Tullis Owen, Jillian A.; McRae, Chris; Adams, Tony E.; Vitale, Alisha – Qualitative Inquiry, 2009
"truth" is an issue of public discussion, research, and everyday performance. Processes of navigating truth, however, are obscure and often unknown. In this project, the authors highlight truth(s) of written life texts. They conceive of truth as "a" rather than "the" "rhetorical device" to use for evaluating personal research and believe that…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Biographies, Validity, Qualitative Research
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Rudy, Jerry W.; Matus-Amat, Patricia – Learning & Memory, 2009
Group 1 metabotropic glutamate receptors are known to play an important role in both synaptic plasticity and memory. We show that activating these receptors prior to fear conditioning by infusing the group 1 mGluR agonist, (R.S.)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG), into the basolateral region of the amygdala (BLA) of adult Sprague-Dawley rats…
Descriptors: Conditioning, Memory, Fear, Brain
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Ma, Nan; Abel, Ted; Hernandez, Pepe J. – Learning & Memory, 2009
It is well established that cAMP signaling within neurons plays a major role in the formation of long-term memories--signaling thought to proceed through protein kinase A (PKA). However, here we show that exchange protein activated by cAMP (Epac) is able to enhance the formation of long-term memory in the hippocampus and appears to do so…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Brain, Neurological Organization, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Brown-Schmidt, Sarah – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
In dialog settings, conversational partners converge on similar names for referents. These "lexically entrained" terms [Garrod, S., & Anderson, A. (1987). "Saying what you mean in dialog: A study in conceptual and semantic co-ordination." "Cognition, 27," 181-218] are part of the common ground between the particular individuals who established the…
Descriptors: Models, Semantics, Memory, Cues
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Koivisto, Mika; Kainulainen, Pasi; Revonsuo, Antti – Neuropsychologia, 2009
The relationship between attention and awareness is complex, because both concepts can be understood in different ways. Here we review our recent series of experiments which have tracked the independent contributions of different types of visual attention and awareness to electrophysiological brain responses, and then we report a new experiment…
Descriptors: Attention, Visual Perception, Short Term Memory, Spatial Ability
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Garcia-DeLaTorre, Paola; Rodriguez-Ortiz, Carlos J.; Arreguin-Martinez, Jose L.; Cruz-Castaneda, Paulina; Bermudez-Rattoni, Federico – Learning & Memory, 2009
Reconsolidation has been described as a process where a consolidated memory returns to a labile state when retrieved. Growing evidence suggests that reconsolidation is, in fact, a destabilization/stabilization process that incorporates updated information to a previously consolidated memory. We used the conditioned taste aversion (CTA) task in…
Descriptors: Memory, Perception, Conditioning, Animals
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Endress, Ansgar D.; Mehler, Jacques – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Word-segmentation, that is, the extraction of words from fluent speech, is one of the first problems language learners have to master. It is generally believed that statistical processes, in particular those tracking "transitional probabilities" (TPs), are important to word-segmentation. However, there is evidence that word forms are stored in…
Descriptors: Cues, Phonemes, Statistical Analysis, Probability
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Visscher, Kristina M.; Kahana, Michael J.; Sekuler, Robert – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Using a short-term recognition memory task, the authors evaluated the carryover across trials of 2 types of auditory information: the characteristics of individual study sounds (item information) and the relationships between the study sounds (study set homogeneity). On each trial, subjects heard 2 successive broadband study sounds and then…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Short Term Memory, Recognition (Psychology), Task Analysis
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