Search results for "Recall"

showing 10 items of 304 documents

Occupational cognitive complexity and episodic memory in old age

2021

The aim of this study was to investigate occupational cognitive complexity of main lifetime occupation in relation to level and 15-year change in episodic memory recall in a sample of older adults (≥ 65 years, n = 780). We used latent growth curve modelling with occupational cognitive complexity (O*NET indicators) as independent variable. Subgroup analyses in a sample of middle-aged (mean: 49.9 years) men (n = 260) were additionally performed to investigate if a general cognitive ability (g) factor at age 18 was predictive of future occupational cognitive complexity and cognitive performance in midlife. For the older sample, a higher level of occupational cognitive complexity was related to…

Psykologi (exklusive tillämpad psykologi)RecallEpisodic memoryIntelligenceCognitive reserveCognitive complexityExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySample (statistics)Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)VDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Helsefag: 800Developmental and Educational PsychologyPreserved differentiationEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceOccupational cognitive complexityPsychologyEpisodic memoryClinical psychology
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Ironic Effects of Thought Suppression: A Meta-Analysis.

2020

The ironic effect of thought suppression refers to the phenomenon in which individuals trying to rid their mind of a target thought ironically experience greater levels of occurrence and accessibility of the thought compared with individuals who deliberately concentrate on the thought (Wegner, 1994, doi:10.1037/0033-295X.101.1.34). Ironic effects occurring after thought suppression, also known as rebound effects, were consistently detected by previous meta-analyses. However, ironic effects that occur during thought suppression, also known as immediate enhancement effects, were found to be largely absent. In this meta-analysis, we test Wegner’s original proposition that detection of immedia…

Rebound effectThought suppressionCognitionAwarenessThinkingMeta-analysisPhenomenonCognitive resource theoryMental RecallHumansAttentionPsychologyGeneral PsychologyCognitive loadCognitive psychologyDefense MechanismsPerspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science
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Depending on music to feel better: Being conscious of responsibility when appropriating the power of music

2014

Abstract This study explores the beliefs held by young people about the power of music to help them feel better during challenging times. Participants included 40 young Australians, aged 13–20, who described their relationship with music and were progressively asked to recall times where music had not been helpful as well as when the consequences of engaging in music had been beneficial. Grounded theory analysis generated a theoretical explanation of why young people's beliefs about the positive consequences of music are so strong, even though the experience of young people with mental health problems sometimes contradicts these views. Implications for professionals are offered; with a part…

RecallAt-risk youthContrast (music)AdolescentsHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Mental healthGrounded theoryGrounded theoryPreferencePower (social and political)Psychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyRap musicta6131Mental healthPsychologySocial psychologyta515MusicThe Arts in Psychotherapy
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Layout attributes and recall

2003

The spatial arrangement of elements such as icons in a computer interface may influence learning the interface. However, the effects of layout organization on users' information processing is relatively little studied so far. The three experiments of this paper examined two attributes of layouts: spatial grouping by proximity and semantic coherence. Learning was assessed by tasks in which 30 participants recalled icon-like items' labels, locations, or both as a series of study-recall trials. The results show that layout organization interacts with task demands. Semantic organization improves recall of labels, and spatial grouping supports recall of locations. When both labels and locations …

RecallComputer sciencebusiness.industryInterface (computing)Information processingGeneral Social Sciencescomputer.software_genreSemanticsTask (project management)Human-Computer InteractionArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Chunking (psychology)Developmental and Educational PsychologyArtificial intelligenceUser interfacebusinesscomputerSpatial organizationNatural language processing
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Is Written Language Production more Difficult than Oral Language Production? A Working Memory Approach

1994

Abstract Is written language production more difficult than oral language production? Probably, yes. But why? Several experiments were conducted in order to test the impact of low-level activities involved in writing on the performance of higher-level activities also involved in writing. Three assumptions were made: (1) the capacity of working-memory is limited, (2) every component of writing has a cognitive load, and (3) every increase in the load devoted to the activity of one component would lead to a decrease in the remaining resources available for the other components. These low-level activities are more resource-consuming in children than in adults because children have not yet autom…

RecallLanguage productionWorking memoryGeneral MedicineDevelopmental psychologyTest (assessment)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Component (UML)Production (economics)Written languagePsychologyGeneral PsychologyCognitive loadCognitive psychologyInternational Journal of Psychology
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Improvement of working memory performance by training is not transferable

2011

Working memory (WM) usually refers to a cognitive system devoted to the simultaneous maintenance and processing of information which plays a crucial role in high-level cognition. Recently, Barrouillet and collaborators showed the importance of controlling the time course of cognitive activities to assess WM capacities. Therefore, they developed a new paradigm to systematically explore the functioning of WM that involved simple but time-constrained activities as processing component. In comparison with traditional tasks, these computer-paced span tasks provide a more accurate evaluation of WM capacities and turned out to be the most predictive of complex cognitive achievements. The present s…

RecallMechanism (biology)Working memoryProcess (engineering)Encoding (memory)Control (management)CognitionPsychologyGeneral PsychologyDevelopmental psychologyCognitive psychologyTask (project management)Europe’s Journal of Psychology
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The cognitive neuropsychology of recollection

2013

The recognition of whether someone, something or somewhere has been experienced before rests on a decisionmaking process. In humanmemory, information is not reproduced as it would be in a computer, but is a reflective, conscious process. This is more so the case when encountering the same scene, environment or idea for a second time. When we recognize something as having been encountered before we arguably make a comparison between what is represented in the cognitive system and what is currently perceived. Consider that somebody uses the word ‘loquacious’, a word which you have only just encountered recently, and up until then, you did not know its meaning, or even existence. When encounte…

RecallMemory errorsConceptualizationCognitive NeuroscienceJudgementBrainRecognition PsychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionDUAL (cognitive architecture)CognitionNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeuropsychologyMental RecallCognitive ScienceHumansMeaning (existential)PsychologyCognitive neuropsychologyCognitive psychologyCortex
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The effectiveness of multimedia programmes in children's vocabulary learning

2009

The present experiment investigated the effect of three different presentation modes in children's vocabulary learning with a self-guided multimedia programmes. Participants were 135 third and fourth grade children who read a short English language story presented by a computer programme. For 12 key (previously unknown) words in the story, children received verbal annotations (written translation), visual annotations (picture representing the word), or both. Recall of word translations was better for children who only received verbal annotations than for children who received simultaneously visual and verbal annotations or visual annotations only. Results support previous research about cog…

RecallMultimediaComputer scienceWorking memorymedia_common.quotation_subjectEducational technologyShort-term memorycomputer.software_genreVocabulary developmentEducationPresentationcomputerWord (computer architecture)Cognitive loadmedia_commonBritish Journal of Educational Technology
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Impact of question-answering tasks on search processes and reading comprehension

2009

Abstract This study examined the effect of (a) high- and low-level questions and (b) reading the text before the questions asked on performance, delayed text recall, and deep text comprehension, as well as on specific text-inspection patterns. Participants were 37 undergraduate students who answered either high- or low-level questions using the software Read&Answer to read and answer questions on the computer screen. Additionally, half of the sample read first a text and then answered the questions (reading-first condition), whereas the other half answered the questions without having read the text in advance (no-reading-first condition). All participants had the text available to search fo…

RecallMultimediamedia_common.quotation_subjectComputer-Assisted InstructionDelayed recallcomputer.software_genreEducationText comprehensionComprehensionReading comprehensionReading (process)Developmental and Educational PsychologyQuestion answeringPsychologycomputermedia_commonCognitive psychologyLearning and Instruction
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Music as an Aid to Learn New Verbal Information in Alzheimer's Disease

2012

the goal of this study is to assess whether new lyrics are better learned and memorized when presented in a spoken or sung form. In normal young adults, mixed results have been reported, with studies showing a positive, a negative, or a null effect of singing on verbal recall. Several factors can account for this limited aid of music. First, the familiarity of the melody might play a role. Second, successive learning sessions and long-term retention intervals may be necessary. These two factors are considered here in a case study of a participant who suffers from mild Alzheimer's disease. As expected, initial learning of new lyrics showed better performance for the spoken condition over the…

RecallNull (mathematics)DiseaseSingingLyricsPsychologySocial psychologyMusicCognitive psychologyMusic Perception
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