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Majerus, Steve; Heiligenstein, Lucie; Gautherot, Nathalie; Poncelet, Martine; Van der Linden, Martial – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
This study investigated the role of auditory selective attention capacities as a possible mediator of the well-established association between verbal short-term memory (STM) and vocabulary development. A total of 47 6- and 7-year-olds were administered verbal immediate serial recall and auditory attention tasks. Both task types probed processing…
Descriptors: Attention, Short Term Memory, Vocabulary Development, Young Children
Ley, Ian; Haggard, Patrick; Yarrow, Kielan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Recent research that assessed spatial judgments about multisensory stimuli suggests that humans integrate multisensory inputs in a statistically optimal manner by weighting each input by its normalized reciprocal variance. Is integration similarly optimal when humans judge the temporal properties of bimodal stimuli? Twenty-four participants…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Sensory Integration, Auditory Stimuli, Tactual Perception
Mayr, Ulrich – Cognitive Psychology, 2009
Recent evidence suggests substantial response-time costs associated with lag-2 repetitions of tasks within explicitly controlled task sequences [Koch, I., Philipp, A. M., Gade, M. (2006). Chunking in task sequences modulates task inhibition. "Psychological Science," 17, 346-350; Schneider, D. W. (2007). Task-set inhibition in chunked task…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory, Reaction Time
Bowler, Dermot M.; Limoges, Elyse; Mottron, Laurent – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2009
The Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, which requires the free recall of the same list of 15 unrelated words over 5 trials, was administered to 21 high-functioning adolescents and adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and 21 matched typical individuals. The groups showed similar overall levels of free recall, rates of learning over trials and…
Descriptors: Autism, Learning Strategies, Verbal Learning, Serial Ordering
Jou, Jerwen – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Recall latency, recall accuracy rate, and recall confidence were examined in free recall as a function of recall output serial position using a modified Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm to test a strength-based theory against the dual-retrieval process theory of recall output sequence. The strength theory predicts the item output sequence to be…
Descriptors: Serial Ordering, Memory, Recall (Psychology), Theories
Lewandowsky, Stephan; Geiger, Sonja M.; Oberauer, Klaus – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
This article presents four experiments that tested predictions of SOB (Serial Order in a Box), an interference-based theory of short-term memory. Central to SOB is the concept of novelty-sensitive encoding, which holds that items are encoded to the extent that they differ from already-encoded information. On the additional assumption that…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Experiments, Memory, Interference (Language)
Leclercq, Anne-Lise; Majerus, Steve – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Serial-order short-term memory (STM), as opposed to item STM, has been shown to be very consistently associated with lexical learning abilities in cross-sectional study designs. This study investigated longitudinal predictions between serial-order STM and vocabulary development. Tasks maximizing the temporary retention of either serial-order or…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Kindergarten, Vocabulary Development, Serial Ordering
Suanda, Sumarga H.; Tompson, Whitney; Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Infancy, 2008
When are the precursors of ordinal numerical knowledge first evident in infancy? Brannon (2002) argued that by 11 months of age, infants possess the ability to appreciate the greater than and less than relations between numerical values but that this ability experiences a sudden onset between 9 and 11 months of age. Here we present 5 experiments…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Age Differences, Habituation
Healy, Alice F.; Shea, Kathleen M.; Kole, James A.; Cunningham, Thomas F. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Three experiments examined the effects of position distinctiveness, item familiarity, and frequency of presentation on serial position functions in a task involving reconstructing the order of a subset of 12 names in a list of 20 names. Three different serial position conditions were compared in which the subset of names occurred in Positions…
Descriptors: Memory, Familiarity, Serial Ordering, Experiments
West, Greg L.; Anderson, Adam A. K.; Pratt, Jay – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Previous studies that have found attentional capture effects for stimuli of motivational significance do not directly measure initial attentional deployment, leaving it unclear to what extent these items produce attentional capture. Visual prior entry, as measured by temporal order judgments (TOJs), rests on the premise that allocated attention…
Descriptors: Serial Ordering, Time Perspective, Spatial Ability, Attention
Hogan, David E.; Huesman, Thomas – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2008
College students with 5 or more years of music training recalled significantly more words from a 16-item word list than did students with 0-4 years of training. The superior recall of the extensively trained students linked to better application of a semantic-clustering strategy across a series of 3 test trials. Music education and language…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Music Education, Music, Semantics
Potter, Mary C.; Nieuwenstein, Mark; Strohminger, Nina – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
A sentence is readily understood and recalled when presented one word at a time using rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) at 10 words/s [Potter, M. C. (1984). Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP): A method for studying language processing. In D. Kieras & M. Just (Eds.), "New methods in reading comprehension research" (pp. 91-118).…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Sentences, Serial Ordering, Memory
Acheson, Daniel J.; MacDonald, Maryellen C. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Many accounts of working memory posit specialized storage mechanisms for the maintenance of serial order. We explore an alternative, that maintenance is achieved through temporary activation in the language production architecture. Four experiments examined the extent to which the phonological similarity effect can be explained as a sublexical…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Experiments, Stimuli
Eidels, Ami; Townsend, James T.; Pomerantz, James R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
People are especially efficient in processing certain visual stimuli such as human faces or good configurations. It has been suggested that topology and geometry play important roles in configural perception. Visual search is one area in which configurality seems to matter. When either of 2 target features leads to a correct response and the…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Topology, Reaction Time, Attention
Delgado, Cesar – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Size and scale are crosscutting ideas integral to scientific understanding. However, research shows that students have little understanding of the size of objects, particularly objects too small to see with the unaided eye. Using a cross-sectional study with 101 middle-school through undergraduate students, a teaching experiment with 24 middle…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Mathematical Concepts, Measurement, Classification

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