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Hagen, John W.; Mesibov, Gary – 1968
The effect of verbal labeling in a serial position short term memory task was investigated. Forty female college students were given 16 trials each. Eight trials involved only central items which had to be recalled. The other eight trials involved both central and incidental items. Half of the subjects verbalized the names of the central items as…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Incidental Learning

Richman, Charles L.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1976
Meaningfulness values, assessed via the production method, were obtained on 40 trigrams for 120 children, 40 each in second and sixth grade. These norms were subsequently used in a free-recall learning study. (MS)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Associative Learning, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education

Purdy, Jesse E.; Luepnitz, Roy R. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1982
Sixty-four subjects were presented pictures and later asked to draw them or provide one-word descriptions to test the hypothesis that decreased retention effectiveness occurs because images stored in long-term memory are accessible only through their verbal labels. Recall of pictures was significantly greater than recall of words. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Adults, Higher Education, Long Term Memory, Paired Associate Learning
Jones, Gregory V. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1979
A multirate mathematical model is presented to support the hypothesis that different types of information are lost from a memory trace at different rates. The model is validated by two experiments assessing the retention of pictures and of sentences at three different delays by cued recall. (Author/CP)
Descriptors: Cues, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Learning Processes

Ruch, Michael D.; Levin, Joel R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1979
Two experiments, involving 90 first-grade children, were conducted to test a retrieval-inefficiency explanation for the failure of visual imagery to facilitate young children's prose recall. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Elementary Education
Wulfemeyer, K. Tim; McFadden, Lori L. – 1983
To determine whether aural enhancements, or actualities, increase either audience recall of, or interest in, radio newscasts, two versions of the same newscast were presented to different groups of university students. One group heard the control report while the other listened to an experimental report supplemented with actualities. A…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Aural Learning, Listening Comprehension, Mass Media Effects
Canelos, James; And Others – 1985
The effects of encoding specificity were evaluated for learners: (1) in a typical classroom group learning environment, (2) receiving an audiovisual presentation on an academic subject, and (3) in a group testing environment. Encoding specificity involves the interaction between the encoding phase of memory or the learning context, the stored…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Cues, Encoding (Psychology), Higher Education
Edelstein, Ronald A. – 1981
Theories of cognitive processing suggest specific effects result from different elaboration treatments. To test this assumption, 125 high school students were randomly assigned to read concept materials containing adjunct elaborations that varied by elaboration type (mnemonics, schematics, or metaphors) and presentation mode (verbal or visual). To…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Concept Formation, Instructional Design

Swanson, H. Lee – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1987
Fifth-grade learning disabled and skilled readers (N=32) were compared on verbal dichotic listening tasks for free recall and cued recall of word lists organized by semantic, phonemic, and structural features. Results indicated that disabled readers were comparable on free recall but were inferior to skilled readers on cued recall. (Author/JW)
Descriptors: Cues, Encoding (Psychology), Intermediate Grades, Language Processing

Bjorklund, David F.; de Marchena, Melanie R. – Child Development, 1984
Reports two experiments showing a possible developmental shift from memory organization based on associative criteria to an organization based on categorical criteria. Children in first, fourth, and seventh grades were given a sort/recall task with items that could be organized into groups of categorical or associative pairs. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Children, Classification, Cluster Analysis
Stader, Ellen D.; And Others – 1990
A total of 90 fifth- and sixth-grade students studied a map of the fictitious island while twice listening to a 1,100-word prose passage describing it. The description included 16 nouns that had been chosen as map features. Map features were identified by labels and icons. Afterwards, students were given a cued recall test with 16 feature-related…
Descriptors: Cues, Elementary School Students, Grade 5, Grade 6
Bartels, Laura Grand; Feinbloom, Jessica – 1981
Ten concrete nouns represented in either a pictorial or a linguistic mode and accompanied by ten nonsense syllables were shown to 77 college students in a study of how pictorial stimuli varied in recall and recognition tasks. The group receiving pictorial stimuli recalled and recognized significantly more nonsense syllables than did the group…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Learning Modalities
Polson, Martha C.; And Others – 1981
A study tested a multiple-resources model of human information processing wherein the two cerebral hemispheres are assumed to have separate, limited-capacity pools of undifferentiated resources. The subjects were five right-handed males who had demonstrated right visual field-left hemisphere (RVF-LH) superiority for processing a centrally…
Descriptors: Adults, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Processes

Van Der Molen, Hugo; Morton, John – Cognition, 1979
Adult females recalled lists of six words, including some plural nouns, presented visually in sequence. A frequent error was to detach the plural from its root. This supports a morpheme-based as opposed to a unitary word code. Evidence for a primarily phonological coding of the plural morpheme was obtained. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Adults, Error Analysis (Language), Foreign Countries, Language Processing
Asp, Susan; And Others – 1979
This study indicates that the way in which stories are presented to children (verbal versus pictorial) makes little or no difference in the children's comprehension or recall of the stories. Ninety-six kindergarten and second grade children either looked at a series of pictures (and were told they formed a story) or listened to the story through a…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Discourse Analysis