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Blumberg, F.C.; Torenberg, M.; Randall, J.D. – Cognitive Development, 2005
Late and early preschoolers' attention and spatial strategies were examined in response to instructions to recall relevant objects [Blumberg, F. C. & Torenberg, M. (2003). The impact of spatial cues on preschoolers' selective attention. Journal of Genetic Psychology, 164, 42-53] and irrelevant objects [Blumberg, F. C. & Torenberg, M. (in press).…
Descriptors: Cues, Incidental Learning, Child Development, Attention
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Rakison, D.H. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
Four experiments examined the role of correlations between dynamic and static parts on 12- to 16-month-olds' ability to learn the identity of agents and recipients in a simple causal event. Infants were habituated to events in which objects with a dynamic or static part acted as an agent or a recipient and then were tested with an event in which…
Descriptors: Infants, Geometric Concepts, Cues, Object Permanence
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Godijn, Richard; Theeuwes, Jan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
After presentation of a peripheral cue, a subsequent saccade to the cued location is delayed (inhibition of return: IOR). Furthermore, saccades typically deviate away from the cued location. The present study examined the relationship between these inhibitory effects. IOR and saccade trajectory deviations were found after central (endogenous) and…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Inhibition, Attention, Eye Movements
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Veling, Harm; van Knippenberg, Ad – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Previous experiments have mostly relied on recall as a dependent measure to assess whether retrieval of information from memory causes inhibition of related information. This study aimed to measure this inhibition in a more direct way. In Experiment 1, it was shown that repeated retrieval of exemplars from a category resulted in longer recognition…
Descriptors: Cues, Inhibition, Experimental Psychology, Recall (Psychology)
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Whittlesea, Bruce W. A.; Masson, Michael E. J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
The authors examine the repetition blindness effect--the failure to report one of the occurrences of a word presented twice in a rapid list. This phenomenon has been ascribed to inhibitory processes that prevent immediate tokenization of the 2nd occurrence of a repeated word. The authors present several kinds of evidence against that account,…
Descriptors: Cues, Inhibition, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes
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Frenck-Mestre, Cheryl – Second Language Research, 2005
The complex trace of saccades, fixations and regressions that the eyes make while taking in a line of text is unquestionably one of the richest accounts available as concerns the process of reading. Recording these jumps, stops and re-takes provides a to-the-letter, millisecond-precise report of the readers' immediate syntactic processing as well…
Descriptors: Cues, Reading, Reading Processes, Second Languages
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Berg, Bruce G. – Psychological Review, 2004
Level-invariant detection refers to findings that thresholds in tone-in-noise detection are unaffected by roving-level procedures that degrade energy cues. Such data are inconsistent with ideas that detection is based on the energy passed by an auditory filter. A hypothesis that detection is based on a level-invariant temporal cue is advanced.…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Cues, Auditory Perception, Auditory Discrimination
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Zwitserlood, Pienie – Brain and Language, 2004
Three experiments investigated the impact of syllabic boundary information and of morphological structure on performance in a sequence-monitoring task. In sequence monitoring, participants detect pre-specified sequences of phonemes in spoken carrier words. Sequences corresponded to the first syllable of the carrier word, to its first morpheme, or…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Morphemes, Cues, Syllables
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Chamizo, V. D.; Rodrigo, T. – Learning and Motivation, 2004
In two experiments rats were trained in a Morris pool to find a hidden platform in the presence of a single landmark. Circular black curtains surrounded the pool, with the single landmark inside this enclosure, so that no other room cues could provide additional information about the location of the platform. This landmark was hung from a false…
Descriptors: Proximity, Cues, Classical Conditioning, Animals
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Forestell, Catherine A.; LoLordo, Vincent M. – Learning and Motivation, 2004
Previous failures to condition preferences for the unacceptable taste cues sucrose octaacetate (SOA) and citric acid (CA) using a reverse-order, differential conditioning procedure (Forestell & LoLordo, 2000) may have been the result of low consumption of the taste cues in training or of their relatively low acceptability to rats that are thirsty…
Descriptors: Cues, Conditioning, Animals, Water
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Roper, Karen L.; Baldwin, Emilee R. – Learning and Motivation, 2004
A two-alternative choice procedure was used with rats to examine preference for discriminative stimuli (correlated with the occurrence of reinforcement) versus uncorrelated cues. Choice of discriminative stimuli was below chance, despite the use of very low levels of reinforcement (12.5% for some rats) known to produce a preference for…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Experiments, Animals, Stimuli
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Wang, Ranxiao Frances – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2005
Traditional models of perspective change problems (i.e., judgment of egocentric target directions from an imagined perspective) assume that performance reflects one's ability to imagine the new perspective. Three experiments investigated whether advanced cuing of the imagination direction improves performance in an imagined self-rotation task. RT…
Descriptors: Imagination, Experiments, Undergraduate Students, Cues
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Migueles, Malen; Garcia-Bajos, Elvira – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2006
Research has demonstrated that the act of remembering can prompt temporary forgetting or inhibition of related contents in memory. This study extends the retrieval-induced forgetting effect to the recall of actions of an event. Based on a normative data study, high- and low-typicality actions of a mugging event were selected. The participants…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Control Groups, Cues
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Hund, Alycia M.; Plumert, Jodie M. – Developmental Psychology, 2003
Two experiments examined how information about what objects are influences memory for where objects are located. Seven-, 9-, and 11-year-old children and adults learned the locations of 20 objects marked by dots on the floor of a box. The objects belonged to 4 categories. In one condition, objects belonging to the same category were located in the…
Descriptors: Memory, Children, Adults, Spatial Ability
Landa, Katrina G. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This study investigated the effects of repeated readings on the reading abilities of 4, third-, fourth-, and fifth-grade English language learners (ELLs) with specific learning disabilities (SLD). A multiple baseline probe design across subjects was used to explore the effects of repeated readings on four dependent variables: reading fluency…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Reading Comprehension, Readability, Intervention
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