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Roisman, Glenn I.; Fraley, R. Chris; Belsky, Jay – Developmental Psychology, 2007
This study is the first to examine the latent structure of individual differences reflected in the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; C. George, N. Kaplan, & M. Main, 1985), a commonly used and well-validated measure designed to assess an adult's current state of mind regarding childhood experiences with caregivers. P. E. Meehl's (1995)…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Attachment Behavior, Individual Differences, Adults
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Teglasi, Hedwig; Simcox, April G.; Kim, Na-Young – Psychology in the Schools, 2007
A psychological construct, such as personality, is an abstraction that is not directly seen but inferred through observed regularities in cognitive, affective, and behavioral responses in various settings. Two assumptions give meaning to the idea of construct validity. First, constructs represent real phenomena that exist apart from the potential…
Descriptors: Personality, Validity, Construct Validity, Personality Measures
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Hutchison, Keith A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
In 2 experiments, participants completed both an attentional control battery (OSPAN, antisaccade, and Stroop tasks) and a modified semantic priming task. The priming task measured relatedness proportion (RP) effects within subjects, with the color of the prime indicating the probability that the to-be-named target would be related. In Experiment…
Descriptors: Semantics, Probability, Attention Control, Task Analysis
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Korenman, Lisa M.; Peynircioglu, Zebra F. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2007
We examined the effects of presentation modality and learning style preference on people's ability to learn and remember unfamiliar melodies and sentences. In Experiment 1, we gauged musicians' and nonmusicians' learning efficiency for meaningful and less meaningful melodies as well as sentences when presented visually or auditorily. In Experiment…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cognitive Style, Musicians, Individual Differences
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Unsworth, Nash – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
Two experiments explored the possibility that individual differences in working memory capacity (WMC) partially reflect differences in the size of the search set from which items are retrieved. High- and low-WMC individuals were tested in delayed (Experiment 1) and continuous distractor (Experiment 2) free recall with varying list lengths. Across…
Descriptors: Retention (Psychology), Individual Differences, Recall (Psychology), Simulation
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Schutte, Nicola S.; Malouff, John M. – Reading Psychology, 2007
This study explored dimensions of adult reading motivation and collected reliability and validity information for a measure that assesses individual differences in adult reading motivation. Reading engagement theory provided the basis for an initial pool of items. A factor analysis showed that four dimensions, (a) reading as part of the self, (b)…
Descriptors: Reading Motivation, Measures (Individuals), Reliability, Validity
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Moore, Don A. – Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2007
Recent research calls into question the generally accepted conclusion that people believe themselves to be better than average. This paper reviews the new theories that have been proposed to explain the fact that better-than-average effects are isolated to common behaviors and abilities, and that people believe themselves to be below average with…
Descriptors: Prediction, Beliefs, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Individual Differences
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Savage, Robert; Pillay, Vanitha; Melidona, Santo – Learning and Individual Differences, 2007
This study explores 1) the components of rapid automatized naming (RAN) by first analyzing the factorial associations between RAN tasks and various nonword decoding and processing speed measures and secondly, by exploring which of these process latent variables are uniquely associated with literacy in 65 below-average readers and spellers. In…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Decoding (Reading), Literacy, Spelling
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Zhang, Zhiyong; Davis, Hasker P.; Salthouse, Timothy A.; Tucker-Drob, Elliot M. – Learning and Individual Differences, 2007
Latent growth models were applied to data on multitrial verbal and spatial learning tasks from two independent studies. Although significant individual differences in both initial level of performance and subsequent learning were found in both tasks, age differences were found only in mean initial level, and not in mean learning. In neither task…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Spatial Ability, Models, Verbal Learning
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Cahan, Sorel; Mor, Yaniv – Cognition, 2007
Narrow Window theory, suggested by Y. Kareev ten years ago, has so far focused on one central implication of the limited capacity of working memory on intuitive correlation estimation, namely, overestimation of the distal population correlation. This paper points to additional and perhaps more dramatic implications due to the large dispersion of…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Computation, Intuition, Correlation
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Wallace, Geoffrey L.; Haveman, Robert – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2007
Differences in administrative (UI) and survey (S) records on employment and earnings have substantial implications for assessing the impact of a variety of public interventions, such as welfare-to-work and employment training programs, and especially the state-oriented welfare reform legislation of 1996. We use data from the 1998 and 1999 waves of…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Employment, Human Capital, Welfare Recipients
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Was, Christopher A.; Woltz, Dan J. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Two individual differences studies tested relationships between listening comprehension and two conceptualizations of working memory (WM) capacity. Recently, some theorists have stressed that the empirically indicated limits of rehearsal-based WM storage components are inconsistent with the amounts of information needed to accomplish complex…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Listening Comprehension, Individual Differences, Models
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Castilla, Anny Patricia; Restrepo, Maria Adelaida; Perez-Leroux, Ana Teresa – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2009
The purpose of the current study is to examine language influence in sequential bilinguals. Specifically, this study evaluates whether performance in a first language predicts success in the acquisition of a second language nine months after exposure to the second language begins. Forty-nine Spanish-speaking children attending English-only…
Descriptors: Semantics, Grammar, Individual Differences, Preschool Children
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Young, Gregory S.; Merin, Noah; Rogers, Sally J.; Ozonoff, Sally – Developmental Science, 2009
This paper presents follow-up longitudinal data to research that previously suggested the possibility of abnormal gaze behavior marked by decreased eye contact in a subgroup of 6-month-old infants at risk for autism (Merin, Young, Ozonoff & Rogers, 2007). Using eye-tracking data and behavioral data recorded during a live mother-infant interaction…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Mothers, Autism, Infants
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Rees, Charlotte E.; Wearn, Andy M.; Vnuk, Anna K.; Sato, Toshio J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2009
Although studies have begun to shed light on medical students' attitudes towards peer physical examination (PPE), they have been conducted at single sites, and have generally not examined changes in medical students' attitudes over time. Employing both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs, the current study examines medical students' attitudes…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Student Attitudes, Physical Examinations, Educational Practices
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