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Bae, Gi Yeul; Choi, Jong Moon; Cho, Yang Seok; Proctor, Robert W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Left-right keypresses to numerals are faster for pairings of small numbers to left response and large numbers to right response than for the opposite pairings. This spatial numerical association of response codes (SNARC) effect has been attributed to numbers being represented on a mental number line. We examined this issue in 3 experiments using a…
Descriptors: Numbers, Spatial Ability, Experimental Psychology, Visual Stimuli
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Wyble, Brad; Bowman, Howard; Nieuwenstein, Mark – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
The attentional blink (J. E. Raymond, K. L. Shapiro, & K. M. Arnell, 1992) refers to an apparent gap in perception observed when a second target follows a first within several hundred milliseconds. Theoretical and computational work have provided explanations for early sets of blink data, but more recent data have challenged these accounts by…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Eye Movements
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Rypma, Bart; Prabhakaran, Vivek – Intelligence, 2009
An enduring enterprise of experimental psychology has been to account for individual differences in human performance. Recent advances in neuroimaging have permitted testing of hypotheses regarding the neural bases of individual differences but this burgeoning literature has been characterized by inconsistent results. We argue that careful design…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Diagnostic Tests, Short Term Memory, Brain
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Greenberg, Seth N.; Goshen-Gottstein, Yonatan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The present work considers the mental imaging of faces, with a focus in own-face imaging. Experiments 1 and 3 demonstrated an own-face disadvantage, with slower generation of mental images of one's own face than of other familiar faces. In contrast, Experiment 2 demonstrated that mental images of facial parts are generated more quickly for one's…
Descriptors: Human Body, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, Recognition (Psychology)
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Van Acker, Frederik; Theuns, Peter – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2010
Information Integration Theory (IIT) is concerned with how people combine information into an overall judgment. A method is hereby presented to perform Functional Measurement (FM) experiments, the methodological counterpart of IIT, on the Web. In a comparison of Web-based FM experiments, face-to-face experiments, and computer-based experiments in…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Internet, Laboratory Experiments, Computer Assisted Testing
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Van der Burg, Erik; Olivers, Christian N. L.; Bronkhorst, Adelbert W.; Theeuwes, Jan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Searching for an object within a cluttered, continuously changing environment can be a very time-consuming process. The authors show that a simple auditory pip drastically decreases search times for a synchronized visual object that is normally very difficult to find. This effect occurs even though the pip contains no information on the location…
Descriptors: Cues, Visual Stimuli, Spatial Ability, Auditory Stimuli
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Panis, Sven; Wagemans, Johan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
To study the dynamic interplay between different component processes involved in the identification of fragmented object outlines, the authors used a discrete-identification paradigm in which the masked presentation duration of fragmented object outlines was repeatedly increased until correct naming occurred. Survival analysis was used to…
Descriptors: Cues, Identification, Cognitive Processes, Models
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Brunel, Lionel; Labeye, Elodie; Lesourd, Mathieu; Versace, Remy – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The aim of this study was to provide evidence that memory and perceptual processing are underpinned by the same mechanisms. Specifically, the authors conducted 3 experiments that emphasized the sensory aspect of memory traces. They examined their predictions with a short-term priming paradigm based on 2 distinct phases: a learning phase consisting…
Descriptors: Memory, Educational Technology, Experiments, Cognitive Processes
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Metcalfe, Janet; Finn, Bridgid – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Two processes are postulated to underlie delayed judgments of learning (JOLs)--cue familiarity and target retrievability. The two processes are distinguishable because the familiarity-based judgments are thought to be faster than the retrieval-based processes, because only retrieval-based JOLs should enhance the relative accuracy of the…
Descriptors: Cues, Familiarity, Prediction, Memory
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Hertwig, Ralph; Herzog, Stefan M.; Schooler, Lael J.; Reimer, Torsten – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Boundedly rational heuristics for inference can be surprisingly accurate and frugal for several reasons. They can exploit environmental structures, co-opt complex capacities, and elude effortful search by exploiting information that automatically arrives on the mental stage. The fluency heuristic is a prime example of a heuristic that makes the…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Memory, Inferences, Cognitive Processes
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Busey, Tom; Palmer, John – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
In both behavior and neuroscience research, it is debated whether the processing of identity and location is closely bound throughout processing. One aspect of this debate is the possibly privileged processing of identity or location. For example, processing identity may have unlimited capacity, while processing location does not. The authors have…
Descriptors: Identification, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes, Attention
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Song, Hyun-joo; Onishi, Kristine H.; Baillargeon, Renee; Fisher, Cynthia – Cognition, 2008
Do 18-month-olds understand that an agent's false belief can be corrected by an appropriate, though not an inappropriate, communication? In Experiment 1, infants watched a series of events involving two agents, a ball, and two containers: a box and a cup. To start, agent 1 played with the ball and then hid it in the box, while agent 2 looked on.…
Descriptors: Intervention, Infants, Cognitive Processes, Eye Movements
Warren, David – ProQuest LLC, 2009
For the last five decades, the medial temporal lobes have been generally understood to facilitate enduring representation of certain kinds of information. In particular, knowledge about the relations among items and concepts appears to rely on that region of the brain. Recent results suggest that those same structures also play a subtle role in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Visual Stimuli, Play, Intervals
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Wyble, Brad; Bowman, Howard; Potter, Mary C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Transient attention to a visually salient cue enhances processing of a subsequent target in the same spatial location between 50 to 150 ms after cue onset (K. Nakayama & M. Mackeben, 1989). Do stimuli from a categorically defined target set, such as letters or digits, also generate transient attention? Participants reported digit targets among…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Cues
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Baxter, Mark G.; Browning, Philip G. F.; Mitchell, Anna S. – Learning & Memory, 2008
Surgical disconnection of the frontal cortex and inferotemporal cortex severely impairs many aspects of visual learning and memory, including learning of new object-in-place scene memory problems, a monkey model of episodic memory. As part of a study of specialization within prefrontal cortex in visual learning and memory, we tested monkeys with…
Descriptors: Visual Learning, Memory, Brain, Animals
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