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Serial Learning (Latest Articles)

 

Latest indexed articles for 'Serial Learning'

Articles 131 to 140 of 200:

Process dissociation and mixture signal detection theory.

30 Oct 2008 The process dissociation procedure was developed in an attempt to separate different processes involved in memory tasks. The procedure naturally lends itself to a formulation within a class of mixture signal detection models. The dual process model ...
rec_pub_18980416-process-dissociation-mixture-signal-detection-theory.htm


Time-related decay or interference-based forgetting in working memory?

30 Oct 2008 The time-based resource-sharing model of working memory assumes that memory traces suffer from a time-related decay when attention is occupied by concurrent activities. Using complex continuous span tasks in which temporal parameters are carefully ...
rec_pub_18980415-time-related-decay-interference-based-forgetting-working-memory.htm


The word grouping hypothesis and eye movements during reading.

30 Oct 2008 The distribution of landing positions and durations of first fixations in a region containing a noun preceded by either an article (e.g., the soldiers) or a high-frequency 3-letter word (e.g., all soldiers) were compared. Although there were fewer ...
rec_pub_18980414-the-word-grouping-hypothesis-eye-movements-reading.htm


A shift in task routines during the learning of a motor skill: group-averaged data may mask critical phases in the individuals' acquisition of skilled performance.

30 Oct 2008 The authors describe a transient phase during training on a movement sequence wherein, after an initial improvement in speed and decrease in variability, individual participants' performance showed a significant increase in variability without ...
rec_pub_18980413-a-shift-task-routines-learning-motor-skill-group-averaged-data-mask.htm


Testing during study insulates against the buildup of proactive interference.

30 Oct 2008 Recent interest in the benefits of retrieval practice on long-term retention--the testing effect--has spawned a considerable amount of research toward understanding the underlying nature of this ubiquitous memory phenomenon. Taking a test may ...
rec_pub_18980403-testing-study-insulates-buildup-proactive-interference.htm


Equivalent effects of grouping by time, voice, and location on response timing in verbal serial memory.

30 Oct 2008 The grouping of list items is known to improve serial memory accuracy and constrain the nature of temporal errors. A recent study (M. T. Maybery, F. B. R. Parmentier, & D. M. Jones, 2002) showed that grouping results in a temporal organization of ...
rec_pub_18980399-equivalent-effects-grouping-time-voice-location-response-timing.htm


Two dissociable updating processes in working memory.

30 Oct 2008 The authors show that the updating of working memory (WM) representations is carried out by the cooperative act of 2 dissociable reaction time (RT) components: a global updating process that provides stability by shielding WM contents against ...
rec_pub_18980398-two-dissociable-updating-processes-working-memory.htm


Changes of procedural learning in Chinese patients with non-demented Parkinson disease.

28 Oct 2008 To study procedural learning changes in patients with non-demented Parkinson disease (PD) but without depression. The Nissen serial reaction time task (SRTT) software version II (as a task of procedural learning), the Wechsler Memory Scale-Chinese ...
rec_pub_18996168-changes-procedural-learning-chinese-patients-non-demented-parkinson.htm


Fast pairs: a visual word recognition paradigm for measuring entrenchment, top-down effects, and subjective phenomenology.

20 Oct 2008 When word pairs having a familiar order are sequentially flashed on a computer in their non-familiar order, (code zip), observers have a strong phenomenology of seeing them in familiar order (zip code). Reversal errors remained frequent even when ...
rec_pub_18948037-fast-pairs-visual-word-recognition-paradigm-measuring-entrenchment.htm


Dopamine D2/D3 receptor agonist quinpirole impairs spatial reversal learning in rats: investigation of D3 receptor involvement in persistent behavior.

Oct 2008 RATIONALE: Dopamine is strongly implicated in the ability to shift behavior in response to changing stimulus-reward contingencies. OBJECTIVES: We investigated the effects of systemic administration of the D2/D3 receptor agonist quinpirole (0.1, 0.3 ...
rec_pub_18836703-dopamine-d2-d3-receptor-agonist-quinpirole-impairs-spatial-reversal.htm

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