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Sundermeier, Brian A.; Virtue, Sandra M.; Marsolek, Chad J.; van den Broek, Paul – Brain and Language, 2005
In this study, we investigated whether the left and right hemispheres are differentially involved in causal inference generation. Participants read short inference-promoting texts that described either familiar or less-familiar scenarios. After each text, they performed a lexical decision on a letter string (which sometimes constituted an…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Inferences, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Reading Comprehension
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Jones, Lara L.; Estes, Zachary – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Bowdle and Gentner (2005) proposed a reconciliation of the comparison and categorization models of metaphor comprehension. Their career of metaphor model posits that, as a metaphorical term becomes more conventional, its mode of processing shifts from comparison to categorization. However, other recent studies (Chiappe, Kennedy, & Chiappe, 2003;…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Comprehension, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes
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Howard, William A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
A detailed examination of a commonly accepted practice in geology offers an example of how to stimulate critical thinking, teaches students how to read reactions, and challenges students to formulate better experiments for determining mineral ages more accurately. A demonstration of a Potassium-Argon radiometric method for dating minerals is…
Descriptors: Geology, Science Education, Reaction Time, Chemistry
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Verhaeghen, Paul; Cerella, John; Basak, Chandramallika – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Five individuals participated in an extensive practice study (10 1-hr sessions, 11,000 trials total) on a self-paced identity-judgment ?n-back task (n ranging from 1 to 5). Within Session 1, response time increased abruptly by about 300 ms in passing from n = 1 to n > 1, suggesting that the focus of attention can accommodate only a single item (H.…
Descriptors: Memory, Reaction Time, Attention, Task Analysis
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Tozcu, Anjel; Coady, James – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 2004
This study investigated the effect of direct vocabulary learning using Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL) on vocabulary knowledge, reading comprehension, and speed of word recognition. It found that students who used Tutorial CALL to learn highly frequent vocabulary did learn a significantly larger number of words than those in a control…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Vocabulary Development, Reaction Time, Control Groups
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Prinzmetal, William; McCool, Christin; Park, Samuel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
The authors propose that there are 2 different mechanisms whereby spatial cues capture attention. The voluntary mechanism is the strategic allocation of perceptual resources to the location most likely to contain the target. The involuntary mechanism is a reflexive orienting response that occurs even when the spatial cue does not indicate the…
Descriptors: Cues, Reaction Time, Spatial Ability, Attention Control
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Maehara, Goro; Okubo, Matia; Michimata, Chikashi – Brain and Cognition, 2004
Participants were required to detect spot stimuli briefly presented to the upper, central, or lower visual fields. The stimuli were presented either on a green or a red background. Results showed that reaction time (RT) was shorter for the lower visual field (LVF) compared to the upper visual field (UVF). Furthermore, this LVF advantage was…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Color, Visual Environment, Reaction Time
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Janack, Tracy; Pastizzo, Matthew J.; Feldman, Laurie Beth – Brain and Language, 2004
Forward masked word primes that differed from the target in the initial, the final or both the initial and final positions tended to slow target decision latencies and there were no significant differences among prime types. After forward masked nonword primes we observed non significant facilitation when primes differed from the target by one…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Word Frequency, Reaction Time, Language Processing
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Rowland, Lee A.; Shanks, David R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors studied the role of attention as a selection mechanism in implicit learning by examining the effect on primary sequence learning of performing a demanding target-selection task. Participants were trained on probabilistic sequences in a novel version of the serial reaction time (SRT) task, with dual- and triple-stimulus participants…
Descriptors: Sequential Learning, Attention Control, Reaction Time, Stimuli
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Sagaspe, Patricia; Sanchez-Ortuno, Montserrat; Charles, Andre; Taillard, Jacques; Valtat, Cedric; Bioulac, Bernard; Philip, Pierre – Brain and Cognition, 2006
The aim of this study was principally to assess the impact of sleep deprivation on interference performance in short Stroop tasks (Color-Word, Emotional, and Specific) and on subjective anxiety. Subjective sleepiness and performance on a psychomotor sustained attention task were also investigated to validate our protocol of sleep deprivation.…
Descriptors: Sleep, Attention, Anxiety, Psychomotor Skills
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McRorie, Margaret; Cooper, Colin – Intelligence, 2004
Nerve conduction velocity (NCV) and efficiency of synaptic transmission are two possible biological mechanisms that may underpin intelligence. Direct assessments of NCV, without synaptic transmission, show few substantial or reliable correlations with cognitive abilities ["Intelligence" 16 (1992) 273]. We therefore assessed the latencies…
Descriptors: Correlation, Cognitive Ability, Intelligence, Reaction Time
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Jentzsch, Ines; Leuthold, Hartmut – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
In serial choice reaction time (RT) tasks, performance in each trial critically depends on the sequence of preceding events. In this study, the authors specifically examined the mechanism underlying RT sequence effects at short response-stimulus intervals (RSIs), in which performance is impaired in the current trial N if events alternate rather…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Performance, Intervals, Experiments
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Anderson, John R.; Taatgen, Niels A.; Byrne, Michael D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
E. Hazeltine, D. Teague, and R. B. Ivry have presented data that have been interpreted as evidence against a central bottleneck. This article describes simulations of their Experiments 1 and 4 in the ACT-R cognitive architecture, which does possess a central bottleneck in production execution. The simulation model is capable of accounting for the…
Descriptors: Responses, Reaction Time, Simulation, Cognitive Processes
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Oberauer, Klaus – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
This article reinvestigates the claim by P. Verhaeghen, J. Cerella, and C. Basak (2004) that the focus of attention in working memory can be expanded from 1 to 4 items through practice. Using a modified version of Verhaeghen et al.'s n-back paradigm, Experiments 1 and 3 show that a signature of a one-item focus, the time cost for switching between…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Memory, Reaction Time, Models
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Van Assche, Eva; Grainger, Jonathan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Four lexical decision experiments are reported that use the masked priming paradigm to study the role of letter position information in orthographic processing. In Experiments 1 and 2, superset primes, formed by repetition of 1 or 2 letters of the target (e.g., jusstice-JUSTICE) or by insertion of 1 or 2 unrelated letters (e.g., juastice-JUSTICE),…
Descriptors: Experiments, Language Processing, Morphology (Languages), Reaction Time
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