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Peer reviewedGreenstock, Jemma; Pipe, Margaret-Ellen – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 1996
This study investigated the influence of peer support and leading or misleading questions on reports of a neutral event by 48 children (ages 5 to 10). Younger children made significantly more errors in response to directly misleading questions than to indirectly misleading questions. Peer support did not influence children's prompted recall…
Descriptors: Age, Children, Error Patterns, Interviews
Peer reviewedBurton, John K.; And Others – Computers in Human Behavior, 1995
Provides an overview of hypermedia, including a history of hypertext and multimedia, and discusses how they have been combined into the term hypermedia; a cognitive overview; dual coding and cue summation; and theories related to learners, including field dependence-independence, memory, and metacognition. Contains 156 references. (LRW)
Descriptors: Field Dependence Independence, Hypermedia, Learning Theories, Literature Reviews
Peer reviewedFazio, Barbara B. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1994
Twenty preschool children with specific language impairment (SLI) were compared to matched peers on counting abilities. SLI children demonstrated knowledge of rules associated with counting but exhibited marked difficulty in counting objects. They showed difficulty with rote counting, displayed a limited repertoire of number terms, miscounted…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Computation, Language Impairments
Peer reviewedBhatt, Ramesh S.; Rovee-Collier, Carolyn – Developmental Psychology, 1994
Three experiments examined whether the perception and retention of feature relations, thought to be critical for object recognition in adults, are evident in early infancy. Three month olds' 24-hour retention was disrupted when features of a 6-item mobile were recombined, indicating that they not only encode feature relations but also remember…
Descriptors: Infants, Memory, Pattern Recognition, Recall (Psychology)
Peer reviewedMandler, Jean M.; McDonough, Laraine – Cognitive Development, 1993
Four experiments investigated conceptual categorization in 7- to 11-month-old infants. Data revealed global differentiation of animals and vehicles, with lack of differentiation of basic level categories within the animal domain, in contrast to data from other studies designed to assess perceptual categorization. Results suggest that infants may…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Fundamental Concepts, Infants
Peer reviewedReese, Elaine; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1993
Investigated long-term consistency and change in maternal style for talk about the past and relationships of those styles to children's memory participation. Nineteen mother-child dyads talked about shared past events at four time points. Resulting patterns indicated clear and enduring maternal narrative style differences and that these…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Memory, Mothers, Parent Influence
Peer reviewedHoffman, William C. – Roeper Review, 1995
Connections between gifted intellect and creativity and Klaus Riegel's Dialectical Psychology are discussed. Dialectical Psychology is explained in terms of the set-theoretic operation of symmetric difference and the set-theoretic complement thereof. It is shown how this structure is involved in developmental psychology, memory, learning, gifted…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Creativity, Developmental Psychology, Gifted
Peer reviewedTerveen, Loren G.; And Others – Human-Computer Interaction, 1995
Discusses large-scale software development and describes the development of the Designer Assistant to improve software development effectiveness. Highlights include the knowledge management problem; related work, including artificial intelligence and expert systems, software process modeling research, and other approaches to organizational memory;…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software Development, Futures (of Society), Improvement
Peer reviewedScruggs, Thomas E.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1994
This study evaluated the effectiveness of promoting relational thinking, using "elaborative interrogation" techniques, to facilitate the content acquisition of 36 elementary school students with mild disabilities. Results indicated that students coached in relational thinking who generated their own explanations outperformed students who…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Elementary Education, Learning Strategies, Memory
Peer reviewedFutterweit, Lorelle R.; Beilin, Harry – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Investigated whether children's recognition memory for movement in photographs is distorted forward in the direction of implied motion. When asked whether the second photograph was the same as or different from the first, subjects made more errors for test photographs showing the action slightly forward in time, compared with slightly backward in…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Cognitive Processes, Photographs
Peer reviewedGillam, Ronald B.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1995
This study of sequential memory in 16 children with language impairment found that list-final suffix effect was substantially larger than in control children, even though other aspects of their recall were normal. Children with language impairment were more dependent upon unanalyzed acoustic and phonetic representations of speech. Response…
Descriptors: Children, Language Impairments, Language Processing, Recall (Psychology)
Peer reviewedMontgomery, James W. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1995
Fourteen children (ages 72-134 months) with specific language impairment (SLI) and 13 with normal language completed a nonsense word repetition task and a sentence comprehension task. Results suggest that SLI children have diminished phonological working memory capacity and that this capacity deficit compromises their sentence comprehension…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Elementary School Students, Language Impairments
Karrer, Rathe; And Others – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1995
Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 6-month-old infants with and without Down syndrome presented with a visual recognition memory task. The ERP morphology was the same for both groups. The chronometry of information processing by infants with Down syndrome was similar to or faster than "normal" infants' processing.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Downs Syndrome, Infants, Memory
Peer reviewedWilcox, Teresa; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Within a small bounded space, the location of a hidden object can be coded in terms of distance information, general area of hiding, or the boundary of the space. The use of these three coding strategies by infants was examined using a visual search task. Results indicated boundary information and the nature of the change influenced coding of…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Encoding (Psychology), Infants
Peer reviewedPerner, Josef; Ruffman, Ted – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Assessed three- to six-year-olds' understanding of their own knowledge on different see-know tests. Found a significant positive association between passing see-know tests and free recall, which persisted even when cued recall and verbal intelligence were partialed out. (MDM)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Memory, Metacognition, Preschool Children


