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Freyaldenhoven, Melinda C.; Nabelek, Anna K.; Tampas, Joanna W. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2008
Purpose: This study investigated the relationship between acceptable noise levels (ANLs) and the Abbreviated Profile of Hearing Aid Benefit (APHAB; R. M. Cox & G. C. Alexander, 1995). This study further examined the APHAB's ability to predict hearing aid use. Method: ANL and APHAB data were collected for 191 listeners with impaired hearing,…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Hearing Impairments, Prediction, Patients
Blank, Hartmut; Nestler, Steffen; von Collani, Gernot; Fischer, Volkhard – Cognition, 2008
The answer is three: questioning a conceptual default assumption in hindsight bias research, we argue that the hindsight bias is not a unitary phenomenon but consists of three separable and partially independent subphenomena or components, namely, memory distortions, impressions of foreseeability and impressions of necessity. Following a detailed…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elections, Memory, Prediction
Garcia-Retamero, Rocio; Rieskamp, Jorg – Psychological Record, 2008
People often make inferences with incomplete information. Previous research has led to a mixed picture of how people treat missing information. To explain these results, the authors follow the Brunswikian perspective on human inference and hypothesize that the mechanism's accuracy for treating missing information depends on how it is distributed…
Descriptors: Simulation, Inferences, Item Response Theory, Prediction
de Win, Maartje M. L.; Jager, Gerry; Booij, Jan; Reneman, Liesbeth; Schilt, Thelma; Lavini, Christina; Olabarriaga, Silvia D.; den Heeten, Gerard J.; van den Brink, Wim – Brain, 2008
Previous studies have suggested toxic effects of recreational ecstasy use on the serotonin system of the brain. However, it cannot be excluded that observed differences between users and non-users are the cause rather than the consequence of ecstasy use. As part of the Netherlands XTC Toxicity (NeXT) study, we prospectively assessed sustained…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Brain, Drug Use, Toxicology
Bright, Jim E. H.; Pryor, Robert G. L. – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2008
This paper presents the implications of the Chaos Theory of Careers for career counselling in the form of Shiftwork. Shiftwork represents an expanded paradigm of career counselling based on complexity, change and uncertainty. Eleven paradigm shifts for careers counselling are outlined to incorporate into contemporary practice pattern making, an…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Change, Prediction, Risk
Ruse, Donald; Jansen, Karen – CUPA-HR Journal, 2008
Human capital planning is an important tool in predicting future talent needs and sustaining organizational excellence over the long term. This article examines the concept of human capital planning and outlines how institutions can use HCP to identify the type and number of talent needed both now and in the future, recognize and prioritize talent…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Talent, Prediction, Futures (of Society)
Oberauer, Klaus; Lange, Elke B. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Reports two experiments on mechanism of interference in working memory. Experiment 1 shows that a target word in a memory list, which bears high similarity to one of 4 words read aloud in the retention interval, is recalled less well than a control word. A second target word, not similar to any word read aloud but with all its phonemes repeated…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Prediction, Memory, Verbal Communication
Wang, Su-hua; Baillargeon, Renee – Cognitive Psychology, 2008
As they observe or produce events, infants identify variables that help them predict outcomes in each category of events. How do infants identify a new variable? An explanation-based learning (EBL) account suggests three essential steps: (1) observing contrastive outcomes relevant to the variable; (2) discovering the conditions associated with…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Processes, Prediction, Learning Processes
Hoffrage, Ulrich; Garcia-Retamero, Rocio; Czienskowski, Uwe – Psychological Record, 2008
Take-the-best (TTB) is a fast and frugal heuristic for paired comparison that has been proposed as a model of bounded rationality. This heuristic has been criticized for not taking compound cues into account to predict a criterion, although such an approach is sometimes required to make accurate predictions. By means of computer simulations, it is…
Descriptors: Cues, Heuristics, Prediction, Cognitive Processes
Costa, Albert; Pickering, Martin; Sorace, Antonella – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2008
This paper considers the nature of second language dialogues, involving at least one non-native (L2) speaker. We assume that dialogue is characterised by a process in which interlocutors develop similar mental states to each other (Pickering & Garrod, 2004). We first consider various means in which interlocutors align their mental states, and…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Cognitive Processes, Dialogs (Language), Native Speakers
Patrick, Megan E.; Maggs, Jennifer L. – Journal of Adolescence, 2008
Experienced consequences predicted short-term changes in alcohol use plans and perceptions of the importance of alcohol-related consequences. Participants were 176 traditionally aged first-year university students who completed a 10-week telephone diary study (total weeks=1735). In multi-level models, men and students who experienced more positive…
Descriptors: Drinking, Prediction, College Freshmen, Diaries
Rutherford, M. D.; Chattha, Harnimrat Monica; Krysko, Kristen M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
The perception of visual aftereffects has been long recognized, and these aftereffects reveal a relationship between perceptual categories. Thus, emotional expression aftereffects can be used to map the categorical relationships among emotion percepts. One might expect a symmetric relationship among categories, but an evolutionary, functional…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Experiments, Prediction, Psychological Patterns
Brennan, Jonathan R. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
A basic challenge for research into the neurobiology of language is understanding how the brain combines words to make complex representations. Linguistic theory divides this task into several computations including syntactic structure building and semantic composition. The close relationship between these computations, however, poses a strong…
Descriptors: Semantics, Syntax, Linguistic Competence, Computational Linguistics
Acevedo, Maria – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Hispanic-American students have the highest high school drop-out rate and as a group are considered to be at-risk for academic failure due to issues of poverty, immigration, language barriers, discrimination, and acculturative stress. This study empirically tested the extent to which cognitive flexibility and planning skills predicted…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Academic Failure, Achievement Tests, Rating Scales
Rodriguez-Naranjo, Carmen; Cano, Antonio – Psychological Assessment, 2010
We describe the development and psychometric characteristics of a new version of the Attributional Style Questionnaire (ASQ; Seligman, Abramson, Semmell, & Von Baeyer, 1979)--a version called the Attributional Style Questionnaire for Adolescents (ASQ-A)--using 3 samples (Ns = 547, 438, and 240) of Spanish secondary school students. In Study 1,…
Descriptors: Construct Validity, Attribution Theory, Questionnaires, Adolescents

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