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Agarwal, Pooja K.; McDaniel, Mark A.; Thomas, Ruthann C.; McDermott, Kathleen B.; Roediger, Henry L., III – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2011
The use of summative testing to evaluate students' acquisition, retention, and transfer of instructed material is a fundamental aspect of educational practice and theory. However, a substantial basic literature has established that testing is not a neutral event--testing can also enhance and modify memory (Carpenter & DeLosh, 2006; Hogan &…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Testing, Educational Practices, Classroom Environment
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Dinner, Isaac; Johnson, Eric J.; Goldstein, Daniel G.; Liu, Kaiya – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
Default options exert an influence in areas as varied as retirement program design, organ donation policy, and consumer choice. Past research has offered potential reasons why no-action defaults matter: (a) effort, (b) implied endorsement, and (c) reference dependence. The first two of these explanations have been experimentally demonstrated, but…
Descriptors: Program Design, Influences, Intervention, Theories
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Pfordresher, Peter Q.; Kulpa, J. D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Three experiments were designed to test whether perception and action are coordinated in a way that distinguishes sequencing from timing (Pfordresher, 2003). Each experiment incorporated a trial design in which altered auditory feedback (AAF) was presented for varying lengths of time and then withdrawn. Experiments 1 and 2 included AAF that…
Descriptors: Evidence, Feedback (Response), Stuttering, Experimental Psychology
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Willemsen, Martijn C.; Bockenholt, Ulf; Johnson, Eric J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
Loss aversion and reference dependence are 2 keystones of behavioral theories of choice, but little is known about their underlying cognitive processes. We suggest an additional account for loss aversion that supplements the current account of the value encoding of attributes as gains or losses relative to a reference point, introducing a value…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Self Efficacy
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Szmalec, Arnaud; Verbruggen, Frederick; Vandierendonck, Andre; Kemps, Eva – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
The current study examined the nature of the processes underlying working memory updating. In 4 experiments using the n-back paradigm, the authors demonstrate that continuous updating of items in working memory prevents strong binding of those items to their contexts in working memory, and hence leads to an increased susceptibility to proactive…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Construct Validity, Validity, Short Term Memory
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Daniel, Reka; Wagner, Gerd; Koch, Kathrin; Reichenbach, Jurgen R.; Sauer, Heinrich; Schlosser, Ralf G. M. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
The formation of new perceptual categories involves learning to extract that information from a wide range of often noisy sensory inputs, which is critical for selecting between a limited number of responses. To identify brain regions involved in visual classification learning under noisy conditions, we developed a task on the basis of the…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Classification, Experimental Psychology, Cognitive Processes
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DiYanni, Cara; Nini, Deniela; Rheel, Whitney – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
We present two experiments exploring whether individuals would be persuaded to imitate the intentional action of an adult model whose actions suggest that the correct way to complete a task is with an inefficient tool. In Experiment 1, children ages 5-10 years and a group of adults watched an adult model reject an efficient tool in favor of one…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Social Desirability, Imitation, Personality
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Mills, Candice M.; Legare, Christine H.; Grant, Meridith G.; Landrum, Asheley R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
To obtain reliable information, it is important to identify and effectively question knowledgeable informants. Two experiments examined how age and the ease of distinguishing between reliable and unreliable sources influence children's ability to effectively question those sources to solve problems. A sample of 3- to 5-year-olds was introduced to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Child Language, Identification, Experimental Psychology
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Rhoades, Brittany L.; Greenberg, Mark T.; Lanza, Stephanie T.; Blair, Clancy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Executive function (EF) skills are integral components of young children's growing competence, but little is known about the role of early family context and experiences in their development. We examined how demographic and familial risks during infancy predicted EF competence at 36 months of age in a large, predominantly low-income sample of…
Descriptors: Income, Infants, Risk, Parent Child Relationship
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Hartcher-O'Brien, Jessica; Alais, David – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
This study examines how audiovisual signals are combined in time for a temporal analogue of the ventriloquist effect in a purely temporal context, that is, no spatial grounding of signals or other spatial facilitation. Observers were presented with two successive intervals, each defined by a 1250-ms tone, and indicated in which interval a brief…
Descriptors: Intervals, Computation, Observation, Research Methodology
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Slattery, Timothy J.; Angele, Bernhard; Rayner, Keith – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
In the boundary change paradigm (Rayner, 1975), when a reader's eyes cross an invisible boundary location, a preview word is replaced by a target word. Readers are generally unaware of such changes due to saccadic suppression. However, some readers detect changes on a few trials and a small percentage of them detect many changes. Two experiments…
Descriptors: Sentences, Eye Movements, Human Body, Word Processing
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Wood, Justin N. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Visual working memory (VWM) is widely thought to contain specialized buffers for retaining spatial and object information: a "spatial-object architecture." However, studies of adults, infants, and nonhuman animals show that visual cognition builds on core knowledge systems that retain more specialized representations: (1) spatiotemporal…
Descriptors: Evidence, Architecture, Infants, Short Term Memory
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Wang, Hua-Chen; Castles, Anne; Nickels, Lyndsey; Nation, Kate – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
The self-teaching hypothesis proposes that orthographic learning takes place via phonological decoding in meaningful texts, that is, in context. Context is proposed to be important in learning to read, especially when decoding is only partial. However, little research has directly explored this hypothesis. The current study looked at the effect of…
Descriptors: Spelling, Phonetic Transcription, Reading Comprehension, Vocabulary Development
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Banai, Karen; Yifat, Rachel – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Previous studies suggest that anchoring, a short-term dynamic and implicit process that allows individuals to benefit from contextual information embedded in stimulus sequences, might be causally related to reading acquisition. Here we report findings from two experiments in which two previously untested predictions derived from this anchoring…
Descriptors: Phonology, Phonological Awareness, Short Term Memory, Reading Instruction
Martin, Andrea Eyleen – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Natural language often contains dependencies that span words, phrases, or even sentences. Thus, language comprehension relies on recovering recently processed information from memory for subsequent interpretation. This dissertation investigates the memory operations that subserve dependency resolution through the lens of "verb-phrase ellipsis"…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Sentences, Cues, Verbs
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