Publication Date
| In 2015 | 6 |
| Since 2014 | 9 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 164 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 420 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 547 |
Descriptor
| Models | 574 |
| Cognitive Processes | 186 |
| Memory | 124 |
| Experiments | 79 |
| Task Analysis | 76 |
| Prediction | 74 |
| Language Processing | 70 |
| Semantics | 68 |
| Visual Stimuli | 54 |
| Bilingualism | 52 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
Author
| Tenenbaum, Joshua B. | 7 |
| Barrouillet, Pierre | 5 |
| Dijkstra, Ton | 5 |
| Green, David W. | 5 |
| Griffiths, Thomas L. | 5 |
| Maddox, W. Todd | 5 |
| Ziegler, Johannes C. | 5 |
| Bayen, Ute J. | 4 |
| Brysbaert, Marc | 4 |
| Camos, Valerie | 4 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 570 |
| Reports - Research | 378 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 101 |
| Opinion Papers | 44 |
| Reports - Descriptive | 39 |
| Information Analyses | 12 |
Education Level
| Higher Education | 60 |
| Early Childhood Education | 12 |
| Adult Education | 8 |
| Elementary Education | 7 |
| Postsecondary Education | 7 |
| Preschool Education | 5 |
| Grade 2 | 4 |
| Grade 1 | 3 |
| Kindergarten | 3 |
| Elementary Secondary Education | 2 |
| More ▼ | |
Audience
| Researchers | 1 |
Showing 1 to 15 of 574 results
Warneken, Felix – Cognition, 2013
Human adults will sometimes help without being asked to help, including in situations in which the helpee is oblivious to the problem and thus provides no communicative or behavioral cues that intervention is necessary. Some theoretical models argue that these acts of "proactive helping" are an important and possibly human-specific form of…
Descriptors: Accidents, Intervention, Infants, Models
Peterson, Robin L.; Pennington, Bruce F.; Olson, Richard K. – Cognition, 2013
We investigated the phonological and surface subtypes of developmental dyslexia in light of competing predictions made by two computational models of single word reading, the Dual-Route Cascaded Model (DRC; Coltheart, Rastle, Perry, Langdon, & Ziegler, 2001) and Harm and Seidenberg's connectionist model (HS model; Harm & Seidenberg, 1999). The…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Phonology, Prediction, Models
Camilleri, Adrian R.; Newell, Ben R. – Cognition, 2013
Previous research has shown that many choice biases are attenuated when short-run decisions are reframed to the long run. However, this literature has been limited to description-based choice tasks in which possible outcomes and their probabilities are explicitly specified. A recent literature has emerged showing that many core results found using…
Descriptors: Probability, Sampling, Models, Outcomes of Education
Basile, Benjamin M.; Hampton, Robert R. – Cognition, 2013
Active cognitive control of working memory is central in most human memory models, but behavioral evidence for such control in nonhuman primates is absent and neurophysiological evidence, while suggestive, is indirect. We present behavioral evidence that monkey memory for familiar images is under active cognitive control. Concurrent cognitive…
Descriptors: Evidence, Short Term Memory, Primatology, Recognition (Psychology)
Breheny, Richard; Ferguson, Heather J.; Katsos, Napoleon – Cognition, 2013
There is a growing body of evidence showing that conversational implicatures are rapidly accessed in incremental utterance interpretation. To date, studies showing incremental access have focussed on implicatures related to linguistic triggers, such as "some" and "or". We discuss three kinds of on-line model that can account for this data. A model…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Perspective Taking, Eye Movements, Models
Berthiaume, Vincent G.; Shultz, Thomas R.; Onishi, Kristine H. – Cognition, 2013
How do children come to understand that others have mental representations, e.g., of an object's location? Preschoolers go through two transitions on verbal false-belief tasks, in which they have to predict where an agent will search for an object that was moved in her absence. First, while three-and-a-half-year-olds usually fail at approach…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Young Children
Seidel, Angelika; Prinz, Jesse – Cognition, 2013
Theoretical models and correlational research suggest that anger and disgust play different roles in moral judgment. Anger is theorized to underlie reactions to crimes against persons, such as battery and unfairness, and disgust is theorized to underlie reactions to crimes against nature, such as sexual transgressions and cannibalism. To date,…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Value Judgment, Models, Negative Attitudes
Sutherland, Clare A. M.; Oldmeadow, Julian A.; Santos, Isabel M.; Towler, John; Burt, D. Michael; Young, Andrew W. – Cognition, 2013
Three experiments are presented that investigate the two-dimensional valence/trustworthiness by dominance model of social inferences from faces (Oosterhof & Todorov, 2008). Experiment 1 used image averaging and morphing techniques to demonstrate that consistent facial cues subserve a range of social inferences, even in a highly variable sample of…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Credibility, Models, Cues
Vallesi, Antonino; Lozano, Violeta N.; Correa, Angel – Cognition, 2013
Preparation over time is a ubiquitous capacity which implies decreasing uncertainty about when critical events will occur. This capacity is usually studied with the variable foreperiod paradigm, which consists in the random variation of the time interval (foreperiod) between a warning stimulus and a target. With this paradigm, response time (RT)…
Descriptors: Models, Intervals, Reaction Time, Prediction
Holbrook, Colin; Fessler, Daniel M. T. – Cognition, 2013
Victory in modern intergroup conflict derives from complex factors, including weaponry, economic resources, tactical outcomes, and leadership. We hypothesize that the mind summarizes such factors into simple metaphorical representations of physical size and strength, concrete dimensions that have determined the outcome of combat throughout both…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Leadership, War, Weapons
Kurumada, Chigusa; Meylan, Stephan C.; Frank, Michael C. – Cognition, 2013
Word frequencies in natural language follow a highly skewed Zipfian distribution, but the consequences of this distribution for language acquisition are only beginning to be understood. Typically, learning experiments that are meant to simulate language acquisition use uniform word frequency distributions. We examine the effects of Zipfian…
Descriptors: Statistical Distributions, Word Frequency, Language Acquisition, Artificial Languages
Holden, Mark P.; Newcombe, Nora S.; Shipley, Thomas F. – Cognition, 2013
The ability to remember spatial locations is critical to human functioning, both in an evolutionary and in an everyday sense. Yet spatial memories and judgments often show systematic errors and biases. Bias has been explained by models such as the Category Adjustment model (CAM), in which fine-grained and categorical information about locations…
Descriptors: Memory, Geographic Location, Spatial Ability, Bias
Yildirim, Ilker; Jacobs, Robert A. – Cognition, 2013
We study people's abilities to transfer object category knowledge across visual and haptic domains. If a person learns to categorize objects based on inputs from one sensory modality, can the person categorize these same objects when the objects are perceived through another modality? Can the person categorize novel objects from the same…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Stimuli, Infants, Visual Stimuli
Sackur, Jerome – Cognition, 2013
An increasing number of studies use subjective reports of visibility, so as to delineate the domain of perceptual awareness. It is generally assumed that degrees of visibility can be ordered on a single unidimensional scale. Here, I put this assumption to test with metacontrast, one of the most studied visual masking paradigms. By means of…
Descriptors: Multidimensional Scaling, Models, Stimuli, Perception
Solman, Grayden J. F.; Cheyne, J. Allan; Smilek, Daniel – Cognition, 2012
We present results from five search experiments using a novel "unpacking" paradigm in which participants use a mouse to sort through random heaps of distractors to locate the target. We report that during this task participants often fail to recognize the target despite moving it, and despite having looked at the item. Additionally, the missed…
Descriptors: Evidence, Experiments, Models, Computer Peripherals

Peer reviewed
Direct link
