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Kibby, Michelle Y.; Kroese, Judith M.; Morgan, Allison E.; Hiemenz, Jennifer R.; Cohen, Morris J.; Hynd, George W. – Brain and Language, 2004
Although children with neurodevelopmental disorders frequently present with reduced short-term memory functioning, the relationship between perisylvian morphology and verbal short-term memory functioning has received limited attention. Thus, examining this relationship in children with neurodevelopmental disorders was the focus of this exploratory…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Developmental Disabilities, Short Term Memory, Neurological Impairments
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Wright, Daniel B.; Mathews, Sorcha A.; Skagerberg, Elin M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2005
When people discuss their memories, what one person says can influence what another personal reports. In 3 studies, participants were shown sets of stimuli and then given recognition memory tests to measure the effect of one person's response on another's. The 1st study (n=24) used word recognition with participant-confederate pairs and found that…
Descriptors: Memory, Stimuli, Word Recognition, Responses
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Leahy, Wayne; Sweller, John – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2005
Interactions among the imagination, expertise reversal, and element interactivity effects were investigated in 2 experiments. In Experiment 1, less knowledgeable primary school students learning to use a bus timetable produced better performance under study than imagination conditions, but an increase in their experience reversed the result,…
Descriptors: Interaction, Imagination, Experimental Psychology, Memory
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Kratzig, Gregory P.; Arbuthnott, Katherine D. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2006
Given the potential importance of using modality preference with instruction, the authors tested whether learning style preference correlated with memory performance in each of 3 sensory modalities: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic. In Study 1, participants completed objective measures of pictorial, auditory, and tactile learning and learning…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Auditory Perception, Hypothesis Testing, Cognitive Style
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Dobbins, Ian G.; Kroll, Neal E. A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Superior detection and rejection of 1 versus another class of items during recognition is called the mirror effect. Some mirror effects may involve strategic criterion adjustments based on item distinctiveness and its relation to memorability. Three experiments demonstrated mirror effects for known versus unknown scenes and 1 suggested a similar…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Recognition (Psychology), Memory, Recall (Psychology)
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Criss, Amy H.; Shiffrin, Richard M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Four experiments tested the predictions made by the model outlined in A. H. Criss and R. M. Shiffrin (2004b). Participants studied 2 successive lists of pairs followed by a recognition memory test for the most recent list. Some items and some pairs were repeated across the 2 lists. Critically, a given item could be repeated in the same or…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Experimental Psychology, Cognitive Tests, Cognitive Processes
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Ono, Fuminori; Jiang, Yuhong; Kawahara, Jun-ichiro – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Contextual cuing refers to the facilitation of performance in visual search due to the repetition of the same displays. Whereas previous studies have focused on contextual cuing within single-search trials, this study tested whether 1 trial facilitates visual search of the next trial. Participants searched for a T among Ls. In the training phase,…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Predictor Variables, Context Effect
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Semrud-Clikeman, Margaret – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2005
This review surveys the empirical literature for assessments of learning problems in children from a neuropsychological perspective. An evaluation of children with learning problems must consider measures of working memory, attention, executive function, and comprehension (listening and written), particularly for children who do not respond to…
Descriptors: Responses, Intervention, Learning Problems, Learning Disabilities
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Duffy, Sean; Huttenlocher, Janellen; Crawford, L. Elizabeth – Developmental Science, 2006
The present study tests a model of category effects upon stimulus estimation in children. Prior work with adults suggests that people inductively generalize distributional information about a category of stimuli and use this information to adjust their estimates of individual stimuli in a way that maximizes average accuracy in estimation (see…
Descriptors: Classification, Computation, Visual Stimuli, Generalization
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Cheit, Ross E. – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2003
Prospective studies have been held out as a kind of Holy Grail in research about remembering or forgetting child sexual abuse. They seem to hold the perfect answer to the verification problems that plague retrospective self-reports in the clinical literature. Prospective studies begin with verified cases of abuse. Then they require detective work…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Child Abuse, Memory, Self Disclosure (Individuals)
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Boucher, Victor J. – Language and Speech, 2006
Language learning requires a capacity to recall novel series of speech sounds. Research shows that prosodic marks create grouping effects enhancing serial recall. However, any restriction on memory affecting the reproduction of prosody would limit the set of patterns that could be learned and subsequently used in speech. By implication, grouping…
Descriptors: Speech, Suprasegmentals, Memory, French
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Rose, Michael; Haider, Hilde; Weiller, Cornelius; Buchel, Christian – Learning & Memory, 2004
In a previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study we demonstrated an involvement of the medial temporal lobe (MTL) during an implicit learning task. We concluded that the MTL was engaged because of the complex contingencies that were implicitly learned. In addition, the basal ganglia demonstrated effects of a paralleled…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Neurological Organization, Behavioral Science Research, Memory
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Akirav, Irit; Kozenicky, Maya; Tal, Dadi; Sandi, Carmen; Venero, Cesar; Richter-Levin, Gal – Learning & Memory, 2004
Emotionally charged experiences alter memory storage via the activation of hormonal systems. Previously, we have shown that compared with rats trained for a massed spatial learning task in the water maze in warm water (25 degrees C), animals that were trained in cold water (19 degrees C) performed better and showed higher levels of the stress…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Animals, Task Analysis, Memory
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Verbitsky, Miguel; Yonan, Amanda L.; Malleret, Gael; Kandel, Eric R.; Gilliam, T. Conrad; Pavlidis, Paul – Learning & Memory, 2004
We have carried out a global survey of age-related changes in mRNA levels in the 57BL/6NIA mouse hippocampus and found a difference in the hippocampal gene expression profile between 2-month-old young mice and 15-month-old middle-aged mice correlated with an age-related cognitive deficit in hippocampal-based explicit memory formation. Middle-aged…
Descriptors: Profiles, Animals, Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Brown, Malcolm Watson; Warburton, Elizabeth Clea; Barker, Gareth Robert Isaac; Bashir, Zafar Iqbal – Learning & Memory, 2006
Recognition memory, involving the ability to discriminate between a novel and familiar object, depends on the integrity of the perirhinal cortex (PRH). Glutamate, the main excitatory neurotransmitter in the cortex, is essential for many types of memory processes. Of the subtypes of glutamate receptor, metabotropic receptors (mGluRs) have received…
Descriptors: Integrity, Recognition (Psychology), Biochemistry, Experiments
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