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Petersen, Anders; Andersen, Tobias S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
The psychometric function of single-letter identification is typically described as a function of stimulus intensity. However, the effect of stimulus exposure duration on letter identification remains poorly described. This is surprising because the effect of exposure duration has played a central role in modeling performance in whole and partial…
Descriptors: Identification, Alphabets, Time, Visual Perception
Jaeger, Antonio; Selmeczy, Diana; O'Connor, Akira R.; Diaz, Michael; Dobbins, Ian G. – Neuropsychologia, 2012
Cortical regions supporting cognitive control and memory judgment are structurally immature in adolescents. Here we studied adolescents (13-15 y.o.) and young adults (20-22 y.o.) using a recognition memory paradigm that modulates cognitive control demands through cues that probabilistically forecast memory probe status. Behaviorally, adolescence…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Adolescents, Brain, Neurological Organization
Peterson, Daniel J.; Mulligan, Neil W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
One of the foundational principles of human memory is that repetition (i.e., being presented with a stimulus multiple times) improves recall. In the current study a group of participants who studied a list of cue-target pairs twice recalled fewer targets than a group who studied the pairs only once, a negative repetition effect. Such a…
Descriptors: Memory, Testing, Repetition, Stimuli
Sparks, Sarah D. – Education Week, 2012
For a generation of children immersed in technology, emerging research suggests that while the temptation to multitask may be pervasive, the ability to control it could be the real bellwether of academic success. The pervasiveness of technology and social media, coupled with a fear of missing out on something important, has led students to pay…
Descriptors: Self Control, Brain, Reaction Time, Attention
Hathorn, Lesley G.; Rawson, Katherine A. – Computers & Education, 2012
Prior research has shown that people are likely to skim information presented digitally with the resultant deleterious effect on accurate mental models of the text. Teaching monitoring strategies and presenting text with adjunct questions are effective strategies for improving the mental models of readers of scientific text, but the two strategies…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Reading Comprehension, Inferences, Experiments
Creel, Sarah C. – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
How do perceivers apply knowledge to instances they have never experienced before? On one hand, listeners might use idealized representations that do not contain specific details. On the other, they might recognize and process information based on more detailed memory representations. The current study examined the latter possibility with respect…
Descriptors: Cues, Familiarity, Musical Instruments, Measurement Equipment
Kangas, Brian D.; Branch, Marc N. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2012
The effects of cocaine were examined under a titrating-delay matching-to-sample procedure. In this procedure, the delay between sample stimulus offset and comparison stimuli onset adjusts as a function of the subject's performance. Specifically, matches increase the delay and mismatches decrease the delay. Titrated delay values served as the…
Descriptors: Cocaine, Drug Abuse, Animals, Animal Behavior
Ankerstein, Carrie A.; Varley, Rosemary A.; Cowell, Patricia E. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2012
Some models of semantic memory claim that items from living and nonliving domains have different feature-type profiles. Data from feature generation and perceptual modality rating tasks were compared to evaluate this claim. Results from two living (animals, fruits/vegetables) and two nonliving (tools, vehicles) categories showed that…
Descriptors: Semantics, Memory, Profiles, Models
Giammattei, Jeannette; Arndt, Jason – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Previous research on the lateralization of memory errors suggests that the right hemisphere's tendency to produce more memory errors than the left hemisphere reflects hemispheric differences in semantic activation. However, all prior research that has examined the lateralization of memory errors has used self-paced recognition judgments. Because…
Descriptors: Semantics, Memory, Lateral Dominance, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Kangas, Brian D.; Branch, Marc N. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2012
Emerging evidence suggests that nicotine may enhance short-term memory. Some of this evidence comes from nonhuman primate research using a procedure called delayed matching-to-sample, wherein the monkey is trained to select a comparison stimulus that matches some physical property of a previously presented sample stimulus. Delays between sample…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Reaction Time, Short Term Memory, Animals
White, Peter A. – Psychological Bulletin, 2012
Forces are experienced in actions on objects. The mechanoreceptor system is stimulated by proximal forces in interactions with objects, and experiences of force occur in a context of information yielded by other sensory modalities, principally vision. These experiences are registered and stored as episodic traces in the brain. These stored…
Descriptors: Play, Imagery, Vision, Motion
Davoli, Christopher C.; Brockmole, James R.; Witt, Jessica K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Reaching for an object with a tool has been shown to cause a compressed perception of space just beyond arm's reach. It is not known, however, whether tools that have distal, detached effects at far distances can cause this same perceptual distortion. We examined this issue in the current study with targets placed up to 30m away. Participants who…
Descriptors: Lasers, Memory, Intention, Perception
Starns, Jeffrey J.; Rotello, Caren M.; Ratcliff, Roger – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Koen and Yonelinas (2010; K&Y) reported that mixing classes of targets that had short (weak) or long (strong) study times had no impact on zROC slope, contradicting the predictions of the encoding variability hypothesis. We show that they actually derived their predictions from a mixture unequal-variance signal detection (UVSD) model, which…
Descriptors: Evidence, Prediction, Study Habits, Models
Mellor, Noha – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2012
Building on Zelizer's framework of analyzing journalism and memory, this article aims to analyze Arab journalists' narratives of the Iraq War. Through scrutinizing four selected narratives, published by four pan-Arab journalists from three different transnational satellite channels (Abu Dhabi TV, Al Jazeera and Al Manar), I aim to show how their…
Descriptors: War, Journalism, Arabs, News Reporting
Pasieka, Agnieszka – Journal of Rural Studies, 2012
The aim of my paper is to discuss the phenomenon of nostalgia for socialism in rural Poland. More precisely, I discuss how experiences of rurality and diverse religious beliefs intertwine with nostalgia. Depicting the memories of socialism, shared with me by the inhabitants of a multi-religious rural commune in Southern Poland, I aim to…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Religion, Catholics, Protestants

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