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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1,291 to 1,305 of 2,389 results
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Cohen, Dale J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Participants' reaction times (RTs) in numerical judgment tasks in which one must determine which of 2 numbers is greater generally follow a monotonically decreasing function of the numerical distance between the two presented numbers. Here, I present 3 experiments in which the relative influences of numerical distance and physical similarity are…
Descriptors: Evidence, Reaction Time, Information Retrieval, Task Analysis
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Jacoby, Larry L.; Wahlheim, Christopher N.; Coane, Jennifer H. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Three experiments examined testing effects on learning of natural concepts and metacognitive assessments of such learning. Results revealed that testing enhanced recognition memory and classification accuracy for studied and novel exemplars of bird families on immediate and delayed tests. These effects depended on the balance of study and test…
Descriptors: Testing, Metacognition, Recognition (Psychology), Classification
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Kinoshita, Sachiko; Lagoutaris, Stephanie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Using the same-different task, Perea, Dunabeitia, Pollatsek, and Carreiras (2009) showed that digits resembling letters ("leet digits"; e.g., 1 = "I", 4 = "A") primed pseudoword strings (e.g., "V35Z3D-VESZED"), but letters resembling digits ("leet letters") did not prime digit strings (e.g., "9ES7E2-935732"), and suggested that this is due to…
Descriptors: Priming, Short Term Memory, Experimental Psychology, Task Analysis
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Rein, Jonathan R.; Markman, Arthur B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Research has shown that people's ability to transfer abstract relational knowledge across situations can be heavily influenced by the concrete objects that fill relational roles. This article provides evidence that the concreteness of the relations themselves also affects performance. In 3 experiments, participants viewed simple relational…
Descriptors: Evidence, Interpersonal Communication, Experimental Psychology, Abstract Reasoning
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Makovski, Tal; Watson, Leah M.; Koutstaal, Wilma; Jiang, Yuhong V. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Visual working memory (WM) is traditionally considered a robust form of visual representation that survives changes in object motion, observer's position, and other visual transients. This article presents data that are inconsistent with the traditional view. We show that memory sensitivity is dramatically influenced by small variations in the…
Descriptors: Testing, Preschool Children, Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory
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Toppino, Thomas C.; Cohen, Michael S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
What do learners do when they control whether to engage in massed or spaced practice? According to theories by Son (2004) and by Metcalfe and Kornell (2005), the tendency for learners to choose spaced practice over massed practice should decline as item difficulty becomes greater. Support originally was obtained when pairs containing unfamiliar…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Difficulty Level, Learning Processes, Prediction
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Woltz, Dan J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Three experiments investigated facilitation in synonym decisions as a function of prior synonym decision trials that were either identical or semantically related. Experiment 1 demonstrated that semantically related prime trials produced less facilitation than identical prime trials, but facilitation from both persisted over 14 intervening trials.…
Descriptors: Priming, Semantics, Language Usage, Decision Making
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Jamieson, Randall K.; Holmes, Signy; Mewhort, D. J. K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Dissociation of classification and recognition in amnesia is widely taken to imply 2 functional systems: an implicit procedural-learning system that is spared in amnesia and an explicit episodic-learning system that is compromised. We argue that both tasks reflect the global similarity of probes to memory. In classification, subjects sort…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Classification, Memory, Neurological Impairments
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Koen, Joshua D.; Yonelinas, Andrew P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
It is well established that the memory strength of studied items is more variable than the strength of new items on tests of recognition memory, but the reason why this occurs is poorly understood. One account for this old "item variance effect" is based on single-process theory, which proposes that this effect is due to variability in how well…
Descriptors: Test Items, Familiarity, Recognition (Psychology), Regression (Statistics)
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Finn, Bridgid – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Remembered utility is the retrospective evaluation about the pleasure and pain associated with a past experience. It has been shown to influence prospective choices about whether to repeat or to avoid similar situations in the future (D. Kahneman 2000; D. Kahneman, D. L. Fredrickson, C. A. Schreiber, & D. A. Redelmeier, 1993). Evaluations…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Educational Quality, Student Attitudes, Pain
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Miles, James D.; Proctor, Robert W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Throughout a lifetime of interaction with the physical environment, people develop a strong bias to respond on the same side as the location of a target object, even when its location is irrelevant to the task at hand. Recent research has shown that this compatibility bias can be overridden with relatively brief but focused training. To better…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Ecology, Bias, Responses
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Kaakinen, Johanna K.; Hyona, Jukka – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
The present study examined how proofreading and reading-for-comprehension instructions influence eye movements during reading. Thirty-seven participants silently read sentences containing compound words as target words while their eye movements were being recorded. We manipulated word length and frequency to examine how task instructions influence…
Descriptors: Sentences, Proofreading, Semantics, Eye Movements
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Chajut, Eran; Mama, Yaniv; Levy, Leora; Algom, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
In the laboratory, people classify the color of emotion-laden words slower than they do that of neutral words, the emotional Stroop effect. Outside the laboratory, people react to features of emotion-laden stimuli or threatening stimuli faster than they do to those of neutral stimuli. A possible resolution to the conundrum implicates the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Emotional Response, Response Style (Tests), Laboratories
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Bosworth, Rain G.; Emmorey, Karen – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Iconicity is a property that pervades the lexicon of many sign languages, including American Sign Language (ASL). Iconic signs exhibit a motivated, nonarbitrary mapping between the form of the sign and its meaning. We investigated whether iconicity enhances semantic priming effects for ASL and whether iconic signs are recognized more quickly than…
Descriptors: Priming, Semantics, Familiarity, American Sign Language
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Ozubko, Jason D.; MacLeod, Colin M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
The production effect is the substantial benefit to memory of having studied information aloud as opposed to silently. MacLeod, Gopie, Hourihan, Neary, and Ozubko (2010) have explained this enhancement by suggesting that a word studied aloud acquires a distinctive encoding record and that recollecting this record supports identifying a word…
Descriptors: Prediction, Memory, Experiments, Coding
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