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Showing 2,851 to 2,865 of 4,976 results
Fedor, Anna; Varga, Mate; Szathmary, Eors – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Center-embedded recursion (CER) in natural language is exemplified by sentences such as "The malt that the rat ate lay in the house." Parsing center-embedded structures is in the focus of attention because this could be one of the cognitive capacities that make humans distinct from all other animals. The ability to parse CER is usually tested by…
Descriptors: Syntax, Semantics, Grammar, Sentences
Scott, Graham G.; O'Donnell, Patrick J.; Sereno, Sara C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Emotion words are generally characterized as possessing high arousal and extreme valence and have typically been investigated in paradigms in which they are presented and measured as single words. This study examined whether a word's emotional qualities influenced the time spent viewing that word in the context of normal reading. Eye movements…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Interaction, Word Frequency, Sentences
Arndt, Jason – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
In an experiment, I examined the influence of 2 associative factors on false memory in the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm (Deese, 1959; Roediger & McDermott, 1995): the strength of the association from studied items to unstudied lure items (backward associative strength, or BAS) and the strength of the association from unstudied lure items to…
Descriptors: Memory, Recognition (Psychology), Association (Psychology), College Students
Rose, Nathan S.; Craik, Fergus I. M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Recent theories suggest that performance on working memory (WM) tasks involves retrieval from long-term memory (LTM). To examine whether WM and LTM tests have common principles, Craik and Tulving's (1975) levels-of-processing paradigm, which is known to affect LTM, was administered as a WM task: Participants made uppercase, rhyme, or…
Descriptors: Evidence, Recall (Psychology), Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory
McFarlane, Kimberley A.; Humphreys, Michael S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Research with the maintenance-rehearsal paradigm, in which word pairs are rehearsed as distractor material during a series of digit recall trials, has previously indicated that low frequency and new word pairs capture attention to a greater degree than high frequency and old word pairs. This impacts delayed recognition of the pairs and interferes…
Descriptors: Memory, Research, Attention, Role
Seamon, John G.; Bohn, Justin M.; Coddington, Inslee E.; Ebling, Maritza C.; Grund, Ethan M.; Haring, Catherine T.; Jang, Sue-Jung; Kim, Daniel; Liong, Christopher; Paley, Frances M.; Pang, Luke K.; Siddique, Ashik H. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Research from the adaptive memory framework shows that thinking about words in terms of their survival value in an incidental learning task enhances their free recall relative to other semantic encoding strategies and intentional learning (Nairne, Pandeirada, & Thompson, 2008). We found similar results. When participants used incidental survival…
Descriptors: Memory, Story Telling, Incidental Learning, Intentional Learning
Walser, Moritz; Fischer, Rico; Goschke, Thomas – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
We used a newly developed experimental paradigm to investigate aftereffects of completed intentions on subsequent performance that required the maintenance and execution of new intentions. Participants performed an ongoing number categorization task and an additional prospective memory (PM) task, which required them to respond to PM cues that…
Descriptors: Intention, Memory, Classification, Cues
Implicit Word Learning Benefits from Semantic Richness: Electrophysiological and Behavioral Evidence
Rabovsky, Milena; Sommer, Werner; Abdel Rahman, Rasha – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Words differ considerably in the amount of associated semantic information. Despite the crucial role of meaning in language, it is still unclear whether and how this variability modulates language learning. Here, we provide initial evidence demonstrating that implicit learning in repetition priming is influenced by the amount of semantic features…
Descriptors: Evidence, Semantics, Priming, Vocabulary Development
Yan, Ming; Zhou, Wei; Shu, Hua; Kliegl, Reinhold – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Semantic processing from parafoveal words is an elusive phenomenon in alphabetic languages, but it has been demonstrated only for a restricted set of noncompound Chinese characters. Using the gaze-contingent boundary paradigm, this experiment examined whether parafoveal lexical and sublexical semantic information was extracted from compound…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Semantics, Chinese, Sentences
McKeown, Denis; Mercer, Tom – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
In the 1st reported experiment, we demonstrate that auditory memory is robust over extended retention intervals (RIs) when listeners compare the timbre of complex tones, even when active or verbal rehearsal is difficult or impossible. Thus, our tones have an abstract timbre that resists verbal labeling, they differ across trials so that no…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Intervals, Experimental Psychology, Auditory Stimuli
Nozari, Nazbanou; Dell, Gary S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
This article describes an initial study of the effect of focused attention on phonological speech errors. In 3 experiments, participants recited 4-word tongue twisters and focused attention on 1 (or none) of the words. The attended word was singled out differently in each experiment; participants were under instructions to avoid errors on the…
Descriptors: Language Research, Attention, Pronunciation, Error Patterns
Kostic, Bogdan; McFarlan, Chastity C.; Cleary, Anne M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Recent work (e.g., Nairne & Pandeirada, 2010) has shown that words are remembered better when they have been processed for their survival value in a grasslands context than when processed in other contexts. It has been suggested that this is because human memory systems were shaped by evolution specifically to help humans survive. Thus far, the…
Descriptors: Memory, Evolution, Context Effect, Cognitive Processes
Boywitt, C. Dennis; Meiser, Thorsten – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
There is converging evidence that the feeling of conscious recollection is usually accompanied by the bound retrieval of context features of the encoding episode (e.g., Meiser, Sattler, & Weiber, 2008). Recently, however, important limiting conditions have been identified for the binding between context features in memory. For example, focusing on…
Descriptors: Memory, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Stimuli
Pachur, Thorsten; Scheibehenne, Benjamin – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
People often attach a higher value to an object when they own it (i.e., as seller) compared with when they do not own it (i.e., as buyer)--a phenomenon known as the "endowment effect". According to recent cognitive process accounts of the endowment effect, the effect is due to differences between sellers and buyers in information search. Whereas…
Descriptors: Preferences, Experience, Decision Making, Behavior
Dufau, Stephane; Grainger, Jonathan; Ziegler, Johannes C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
We describe a leaky competing accumulator (LCA) model of the lexical decision task that can be used as a response/decision module for any computational model of word recognition. The LCA model uses evidence for a word, operationalized as some measure of lexical activity, as input to the "YES" decision node. Input to the "NO" decision node is…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Task Analysis, Semantics, Validity

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