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Scheck, Petra; Nelson, Thomas O. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
The authors investigated whether underconfidence in judgments of learning (JOLs) is pervasive across multiple study-test trials as suggested by A. Koriat, L. Sheffer, and H. Ma'ayan (2002) or whether underconfidence with practice (UWP) might be a kind of anchoring-and-adjustment effect, such that the occurrence or nonoccurrence of the UWP effect…
Descriptors: Self Esteem, Psychological Patterns, Psychological Studies, Value Judgment
Wilcox, Teresa; Chapa, Catherine – Cognition, 2004
Wilcox (Cognition 72 (1999) 125) reported that infants are more sensitive to form than surface features when individuating objects in occlusion events: it is not until 7.5 months that infants spontaneously use pattern information, and 11.5 months that they spontaneously use color information, as the basis for object individuation. The present…
Descriptors: Infants, Color, Recognition (Psychology), Visual Discrimination
Feldman, Robert S.; Allen, Vernon L. – 1974
The four studies in this report consider the attribution of ability in the relationship of tutor to tutee among elementary level students. In each of the studies, the tutee displayed, or was represented as displaying, one of four learning sequences: success-success, failure-failure, failure-success, or success-failure. The results of the first…
Descriptors: Cross Age Teaching, Educational Research, Elementary School Students, Peer Relationship
Yontef, Gary M.; White, Glenn M. – 1976
Male subjects holding extreme positions on an aggressive-submissive continuum were trichotomized into involvement levels and received an aggressive communication and a submissive communication in one of two orders. The 144 subjects estimated each communicator's position, judged each communicator on Semantic Differential scales, and then…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Communication Problems, Communication (Thought Transfer), Males
Peer reviewedMorris, Peter E. – British Journal of Psychology, 1977
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Memory, Primacy Effect, Psychological Studies
Peer reviewedSarver, Gary S.; And Others – Child Development, 1976
The present study was designed to investigate the effects of stimulus presentation rate on recall and primacy-recency effects in children. Results indicated that the traditional interpretation of the primacy effect as reflecting long-term memory store may not be valid. (Author/SB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Memory
Precision of Imitation as a Function of Preschoolers' Understanding of the Goal of the Demonstration
Williamson, Rebecca A.; Markman, Ellen M. – Developmental Psychology, 2006
The authors argue that imitation is a flexible and adaptive learning mechanism in that children do not always reproduce all of the details they can from a demonstration. Instead, they vary their replications depending on their interpretation of the situation. Specifically, the authors propose that when children do not understand the overall reason…
Descriptors: Imitation, Observational Learning, Preschool Children, Demonstrations (Educational)
Farrell, Simon; Lewandowsky, Stephan – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
Several competing theories of short-term memory can explain serial recall performance at a quantitative level. However, most theories to date have not been applied to the accompanying pattern of response latencies, thus ignoring a rich and highly diagnostic aspect of performance. This article explores and tests the error latency predictions of…
Descriptors: Serial Ordering, Short Term Memory, Modeling (Psychology), Recall (Psychology)
Larkin, Judith E.; And Others – 1983
Previous research on the primacy effect in ability attribution has focused on intellectual ability, using intelligence test problems as the stimulus material. To examine ability attribution under conditions of ascending (improving), descending, and random patterns of performance on a typing task, 179 college students (69 males, 110 females)…
Descriptors: Ability, Attribution Theory, College Students, Higher Education
Hagen, John William; Kail, Robert V., Jr. – 1973
Children's short-term memory was studied under two experimental conditions: one in which recall was expected to be facilitated because of the provision of a study period, and one in which a distracting task was imposed that was expected to interfere with recall. Forty subjects at each of two age levels, 7 and 11 years, were tested in a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary School Students, Memory, Primacy Effect
Peer reviewedMonsell, Stephen – Cognitive Psychology, 1978
Four possible mechanisms for short-term item recognition are distinguished. Manipulations of recency, particularly of negative probe items, provide critical tests. Two experiments were conducted using Sternberg's varied-set reaction time paradigm, coupled with procedures intended to minimize rehearsal and control the recency of probes and memory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Memory
Peer reviewedLiben, Lynn S.; Drury, Alinda M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1977
Examined the use of rehearsal strategies by deaf and normal children. (BD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Deafness, Elementary School Students, Handicapped Children
Gianutsos, Rosamond – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1972
Purpose of these four experiments was to elucidate the role of grouping in remembering words by using single-trial free recall. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Classification, Cluster Grouping, Information Storage, Memory
Peer reviewedBerch, Daniel B. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1975
Several measures of sensitivity (unbiased retention) and response bias are described and evaluated in terms of their applicability to the probe-type serial memory task. Suggestions are made regarding the major factors that should be considered when selecting an index for one's data. (Author/GO)
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Memory, Nonparametric Statistics, Primacy Effect
Siegel, Alexander W.; And Others – 1975
In this study, a procedure was devised to experimentally separate the spatial and temporal task components of a serial-position recall task in an attempt to account for the primacy effect observed in experiments using this paradigm with young children and retarded subjects. A total of 48, 5- to 7-year-old, children were tested in a serial-position…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Grade 1, Grade 2, Kindergarten

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