Find-Health-Articles.com - making medical research available to everyone

Paired-Associate Learning (Latest Articles)

 

Latest indexed articles for 'Paired-Associate Learning'

Articles 51 to 60 of 200:

The role of metacognitive knowledge in recollection rejection.

30 Dec 2008 Recollection rejection is a memory editing mechanism in which related lures are rejected because of the recollection of the lure's instantiating target (e.g., "I know it wasn't pretty because it was beautiful"). According to one view, recollection ...
rec_pub_19353930-the-role-metacognitive-knowledge-recollection-rejection.htm


False memory in bilinguals: does switching languages increase false memories?

30 Dec 2008 People often receive and recount information in different languages. This experiment examined the impact of switching languages on false recall, recognition, and recognition confidence. We presented Spanish-English bilinguals with 10 lists of words ...
rec_pub_19353928-false-memory-bilinguals-does-switching-languages-increase-false.htm


Signal detection with criterion noise: applications to recognition memory.

30 Dec 2008 A tacit but fundamental assumption of the theory of signal detection is that criterion placement is a noise-free process. This article challenges that assumption on theoretical and empirical grounds and presents the noisy decision theory of signal ...
rec_pub_19159149-signal-detection-criterion-noise-applications-recognition-memory.htm


Associative and repetition priming with the repeated masked prime technique: no priming found.

30 Dec 2008 Wentura and Frings (2005) reported evidence of subliminal categorical priming on a lexical decision task, using a new method of visual masking in which the prime string consisted of the prime word flanked by random consonants and random letter masks ...
rec_pub_19103980-associative-repetition-priming-repeated-masked-prime-technique.htm


Neurophysiological correlates of online word learning in 14-month-old infants.

Dec 2008 Between 12 and 14 months infants switch from slow to fast word learning mode. The neural processes involved in this development are largely unknown. This study explored the brain activity related to the fast learning of object-word mappings in ...
rec_pub_18955904-neurophysiological-correlates-online-word-learning-14-month-old.htm


Relative fluency and illusions of recognition memory.

29 Nov 2008 A hallmark of the experience of perceptual fluency is the sense that a familiar stimulus seems to pop out from its background, such as when one notices the face of a friend in a crowd of strangers. This experience suggests that fluency-based ...
rec_pub_19001590-relative-fluency-illusions-recognition-memory.htm


Semantic processing in "associative" false memory.

29 Nov 2008 We studied the semantic properties of a class of illusions, of which the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm is the most prominent example, in which subjects falsely remember words that are associates of studied words. We analyzed DRM materials ...
rec_pub_19001566-semantic-processing-associative-false-memory.htm


Cognitive mechanisms underlying recovered-memory experiences of childhood sexual abuse.

23 Nov 2008 People sometimes report recovering long-forgotten memories of childhood sexual abuse. The memory mechanisms that lead to such reports are not well understood, and the authenticity of recovered memories has often been challenged. We identified two ...
rec_pub_19037903-cognitive-mechanisms-underlying-recovered-memory-experiences.htm


Episodic accessibility and morphological processing: evidence from long-term auditory priming.

3 Nov 2008 Long-term priming studies of lexical processing have yielded conflicting claims as to whether abstract versus episodic representations are involved during word recognition. A critical piece of evidence that could separate the two accounts rests on ...
rec_pub_18990359-episodic-accessibility-morphological-processing-evidence-long-term.htm


A decrease in conjunction error rates across lags on a continuous recognition task: a robust pattern.

30 Oct 2008 In four experiments, the lag retention interval from parent words (e.g., blackmail, jailbird) to a conjunction word (blackbird) was manipulated in a continuous recognition task. Alterations to the basic procedure of Jones and Atchley (2002) were ...
rec_pub_18942037-a-decrease-conjunction-error-rates-lags-continuous-recognition-task.htm

Results: [1-10] [11-20] [21-30] [31-40] [41-50] [51-60] [61-70] [71-80] [81-90] [91-100] [101-110] [111-120] [121-130] [131-140] [141-150] [151-160] [161-170] [171-180] [181-190] [191-200]

© Advanogy LLC 2003-2009 - All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Contact Us | Index