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Pineno, Oskar; Matute, Helena – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2005
Retroactive interference between cues trained apart has been regarded as an effect that occurs because the target and interfering associations share a common outcome. Although this view is consistent with evidence in the verbal learning tradition (Underwood, 1966) and, more recently, in predictive learning with humans (Pineno & Matute, 2000),…
Descriptors: Cues, Verbal Learning, Organizations (Groups), Prediction
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Calandreau, Ludovic; Desmedt, Aline; Decorte, Laurence; Jaffard, Robert – Learning & Memory, 2005
Convergent data suggest dissociated roles for the lateral (LA) and basolateral (BLA) amygdaloid nuclei in fear conditioning, depending on whether a discrete conditioned stimulus (CS)-unconditional stimulus (US) or context-US association is considered. Here, we show that pretraining inactivation of the BLA selectively impaired conditioning to…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Fear, Classical Conditioning, Context Effect
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Salverda, Anne Pier; Dahan, Delphine; McQueen, James M. – Cognition, 2003
Participants' eye movements were monitored as they heard sentences and saw four pictured objects on a computer screen. Participants were instructed to click on the object mentioned in the sentence. There were more transitory fixations to pictures representing monosyllabic words (e.g. "ham") when the first syllable of the target word (e.g.…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cues, Eye Movements, Word Recognition
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Babaii, Esmat; Moghaddam, Maryam J. – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2006
Research on C-testing has given us few accounts of the relationship between text characteristics and the nature of processing in the C-test completion. The present investigation set out to contribute to this line of research. The purpose of the study was two-fold: First, it attempted to explore the factors by which the difficulty of the C-test can…
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Syntax, Testing, Difficulty Level
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Gajadhar, Joan; Green, John – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2005
Communication is often not so much what people write or say but how they write and often what they do not say. Thus, meaning in real-world chat messages depends not only on the words they use but also on how they express meaning through nonverbal cues. Online chat is simple, direct, and unrestrained. While it contains many of the elements of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computer Mediated Communication, Cues, Nonverbal Communication
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Jongman, Allard; Wang, Yue; Kim, Brian H. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2003
Most studies have been unable to identify reliable acoustic cues for the recognition of the English nonsibilant fricatives /f, v, [theta], [eth]/. The present study was designed to test the extent to which the perception of these fricatives by normal-hearing adults is based on other sources of information, namely, linguistic context and visual…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Cues, Recognition (Psychology), English
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Roy, Marguerite; Chi, Michelene T. H. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2003
There has been a national call for increased use of computers and technology in schools. Currently, however, little is known about how students use and learn from these technologies. This study explores how eighth-grade students use the Web to search for, browse, and find information in response to a specific prompt (how mosquitoes find their…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Internet, Females, Males
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Fields, Alexa W.; Shelton, Amy L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Spatial skills are known to vary widely among normal individuals. This project was designed to address whether these individual differences are differentially related to large-scale environmental learning from route (ground-level) and survey (aerial) perspectives. Participants learned two virtual environments (route and survey) with limited…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Spatial Ability, Visual Measures, Computer Simulation
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Koriat, Asher; Ma'ayan, Hilit; Sheffer, Limor; Bjork, Robert A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Judgments of learning (JOLs) underestimate the increase in recall that occurs with repeated study (the underconfidence-with-practice effect; UWP). The authors explore an account in terms of a foresight bias in which JOLs are inflated when the to-be-recalled target highlights aspects of the cue that are not transparent when the cue appears alone…
Descriptors: Mnemonics, Bias, Learning, Recall (Psychology)
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Brockmole, James R.; Castelhano, Monica S.; Henderson, John M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
In contextual cueing, the position of a target within a group of distractors is learned over repeated exposure to a display with reference to a few nearby items rather than to the global pattern created by the elements. The authors contrasted the role of global and local contexts for contextual cueing in naturalistic scenes. Experiment 1 showed…
Descriptors: Cues, Visual Perception, Context Effect, Role Theory
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Rickard, Timothy C.; Bajic, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
The applicability of the identical elements (IE) model of arithmetic fact retrieval (T. C. Rickard, A. F. Healy, & L. E. Bourne, 1994) to cued recall from episodic (image and sentence) memory was explored in 3 transfer experiments. In agreement with results from arithmetic, speedup following even minimal practice recalling a missing word from an…
Descriptors: Cues, Recall (Psychology), Visual Stimuli, Sentences
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Cohen, Andrew L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Some potential contributions of invariants, heuristics, and exemplars to the perception of dynamic properties in the colliding balls task were explored. On each trial, an observer is asked to determine the heavier of 2 colliding balls. The invariant approach assumes that people can learn to detect complex visual patterns that reliably specify…
Descriptors: Memory, Mathematical Models, Visual Perception, Heuristics
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Richardson, Jessica; Harris, Laurel; Plante, Elena; Gerken, LouAnn – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2006
Purpose: The purpose of this experiment was to determine if nonreferential morphophonological information was sufficient to facilitate the learning of gender subcategories (i.e., masculine vs. feminine) in individuals with normal language (NL) and those with a history of language-based learning disabilities (HLD). Method: Thirty-two adults…
Descriptors: Cues, Learning Disabilities, Gender Differences, Stimuli
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Birkan, Bunyamin – Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 2005
Effectiveness of a simultaneous prompting procedure was evaluated for students with mental retardation at different levels of schools (preschool, primary and secondary grades) using various discrete tasks. Participants included three students whose functioning levels ranged from typically developing to mild and moderate mental disabilities.…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Prompting, Cues, Instructional Effectiveness
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Butler, Ruth – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2006
Aims: The aims of this research were to examine the predictions that (a) the kind of evaluation pupils anticipate will influence their initial achievement goals and, as a result, the quality and consequences of task engagement; and (b) initial mastery goals will promote new learning and intrinsic motivation and initial ability goals will promote…
Descriptors: Cues, Student Motivation, Student Evaluation, Secondary Education
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