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Showing 271 to 285 of 2,359 results Save | Export
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Long, Changquan; Lu, Xiaoying; Zhang, Li; Li, Hong; Deak, Gedeon O. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Inductive generalization of novel properties to same-category or similar-looking objects was studied in Chinese preschool children. The effects of category labels on generalizations were investigated by comparing basic-level labels, superordinate-level labels, and a control phrase applied to three kinds of stimulus materials: colored photographs…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Child Psychology, Speech Communication, Cartoons
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Vida, Mark D.; Maurer, Daphne – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
The current research compared the ability of adults and children to determine where another person is looking in shared visual space (triadic gaze). In Experiment 1, children (6-, 8-, 10-, and 14-year-olds) and adults viewed photographs of a model fixating a series of positions separated by 1.6 degrees along the horizontal plane. The task was to…
Descriptors: Infants, Human Body, Inferences, Comparative Analysis
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Howe, Christine; Tavares, Joana Taylor; Devine, Amy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Adults make erroneous predictions about object fall despite recognizing when observed displays are correct or incorrect. Prediction requires explicit engagement with conceptual knowledge, whereas recognition can be achieved through tacit processing. Therefore, it has been suggested that the greater challenge imposed by explicit engagement leads to…
Descriptors: Models, Prediction, Scientific Concepts, Program Effectiveness
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Luo, Yingyi; Yan, Ming; Zhou, Xiaolin – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Prosodic boundaries can be used to guide syntactic parsing in both spoken and written sentence comprehension, but it is unknown whether the processing of prosodic boundaries affects the processing of upcoming lexical information. In 3 eye-tracking experiments, participants read silently sentences that allow for 2 possible syntactic interpretations…
Descriptors: Sentences, Eye Movements, Silent Reading, Cues
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Mitterer, Holger; Russell, Kevin – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
In speech production, high-frequency words are more likely than low-frequency words to be phonologically reduced. We tested in an eye-tracking experiment whether listeners can make use of this correlation between lexical frequency and phonological realization of words. Participants heard prefixed verbs in which the prefix was either fully produced…
Descriptors: Phonology, Phonological Awareness, Eye Movements, Experimental Psychology
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Tempel, Tobias; Frings, Christian – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
When body movements are stored in memory in an organized manner, linked to a common retrieval cue like the effector with which to execute the movement, interference may arise as soon as one initiates the execution of a specific body movement in the presence of the retrieval cue because related motor programs also are activated. We investigated the…
Descriptors: Motion, Memory, Human Body, Interference (Learning)
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Hemmer, Pernille; Criss, Amy H. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
The role of experience in memory, specifically the word frequency (WF) mirror effect showing higher hit rates and lower false alarm rates for low-frequency words, is one of the hallmarks of memory. However, this "regularity of memory" is limited because normative WF has been treated as discrete (low vs. high). We evaluate the extent to…
Descriptors: Experience, Memory, Word Frequency, Experimental Psychology
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Parmentier, Fabrice B. R.; Hebrero, Maria – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
It is well established that a task-irrelevant sound (deviant sound) departing from an otherwise repetitive sequence of sounds (standard sounds) elicits an involuntary capture of attention and orienting response toward the deviant stimulus, resulting in the lengthening of response times in an ongoing task. Some have argued that this type of…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Interference (Learning), Stimuli, Reaction Time
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Locey, Matthew L.; Safin, Vasiliy; Rachlin, Howard – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2013
Altruistic behavior has been defined in economic terms as “…costly acts that confer economic benefits on other individuals” (Fehr & Fischbacher, 2003). In a prisoner's dilemma game, cooperation benefits the group but is costly to the individual (relative to defection), yet a significant number of players choose to cooperate. We propose that…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Social Influences, Cooperating Teachers, Group Activities
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Mulligan, Neil W.; Spataro, Pietro; Picklesimer, Milton – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014
Study stimuli presented at the same time as unrelated targets in a detection task are better remembered than stimuli presented with distractors. This attentional boost effect (ABE) has been found with pictorial (Swallow & Jiang, 2010) and more recently verbal materials (Spataro, Mulligan, & Rossi-Arnaud, 2013). The present experiments…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Memory
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Caplan, Jeremy B.; Boulton, Kathy L.; Gagné, Christina L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014
Early verbal-memory researchers assumed participants represent memory of a pair of unrelated items with 2 independent, separately modifiable, directional associations. However, memory for pairs of unrelated words (A-B) exhibits associative symmetry: a near-perfect correlation between accuracy on forward (A??) and backward (??B) cued recall. This…
Descriptors: Paired Associate Learning, Cues, Recall (Psychology), Morphology (Languages)
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Landy, David; Brookes, David; Smout, Ryan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014
Formal algebras are among the most powerful and general mechanisms for expressing quantitative relational statements; yet, even university engineering students, who are relatively proficient with algebraic manipulation, struggle with and often fail to correctly deploy basic aspects of algebraic notation (Clement, 1982). In the cognitive tradition,…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Algebra, Number Concepts, Equations (Mathematics)
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Nestler, Steffen; Blank, Hartmut; Egloff, Boris – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Hindsight bias has recently been conceived of not as a unitary phenomenon but as a conglomerate of 3 separate phenomenological manifestations ("hindsight components"; Blank, Nestler, von Collani, & Fischer, 2008): memory distortions, impressions of foreseeability, and impressions of inevitability. These components are thought to be fundamentally…
Descriptors: Evidence, Memory, Undergraduate Students, Experimental Psychology
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Mason, Malia F.; Bar, Moshe – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Mood affects the way people think. But can the way people think affect their mood? In the present investigation, we examined this promising link by testing whether mood is influenced by the presence or absence of associative progression by manipulating the scope of participants' information processing and measuring their subsequent mood. In…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Influences, Cognitive Processes
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Walker, Jennifer M.; Ramsey, Ashley K.; Fowler, Stephanie W.; Schachtman, Todd R. – Psychological Record, 2012
Previous research has found that swim stress during a classical conditioning trial attenuates conditioned taste aversion (CTA). In the current study, rats were used to examine the effects of inescapable swim stress on the habituation of neophobia to a flavored solution and reacquisition of an extinguished conditioned taste aversion. In Experiment…
Descriptors: Classical Conditioning, Animals, Animal Behavior, Behavioral Science Research
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