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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1987
Results from three experiments suggest that attention to context may benefit target recall in situations in which the context can be meaningfully related to the target. Adults seem to be more able to engage in context-interactive processing of stimulus information than are children, who base target selection on perceptual information. (PCB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Children, Cues
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1987
The goal of this study was to determine some of the factors that contribute to developmental differences children and adults display when they use cues to retrieve specific memories. (PCB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cues, Individual Development
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1988
Five experiments investigated whether the cued recall of children and adults differed for classified events featuring different category and relation types. Recall for events differed strongly for children and adults. Differences were attributed to properties of the internal structure of event representation in memory. (SKC)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Determined if young children can evaluate the adequacy of communications and situations that specify or omit deictic information critical to the listener's performance. Results showed that all subjects discriminated among deictically adequate and inadequate communications, but that 6-year-olds made fewer correct judgments than did 9-year-olds and…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Results suggest that children can use the rules of conversational sequencing to evaluate the need for an inference to the speaker's intent when speakers deliberately violate a rule. This ability is acquired by six or seven years of age, but children do not correctly infer the speaker's intent until they are eight or nine years old. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Children, Cognitive Development
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Child Development, 1982
Examines whether young children and adults are able to interpret sarcastic utterances and whether placements of contextual information before or after the utterance differentially affect interpretation. Results obtained from first and third graders and from college students indicated that different placements of contextual information do affect…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Communication Skills
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Five experiments examined the extent and nature of the referential source errors of 5- to 10-year-old children who listened to stories containing a referential utterance. The results supported five conclusions about children's confusion of different sources of information in referential communication. (SW)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Elementary Education, Language Processing
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1985
Second-graders, fifth-graders, and adults participated in an experiment of cued recall for cue-target picture and word pairs. Results suggested that differences in the encoding of both specific and categorical attribute information contribute to developmental recall differences independently of encoding intent and stimulus modality. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cues
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ackerman, Brian P. – Child Development, 1986
Two experiments examine use of defining, characteristic, category, and identical semantic features of word concept information in cued recall. College adults and 7- to 11-year-old children were shown word triplets in which context words were related or unrelated to final target word. Results suggest meaning features differ in providing medium for…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, College Students, Concept Formation