Search results for "TASK"

showing 10 items of 1658 documents

“It is alive!” Evidence for animacy effects in semantic categorization and lexical decision

2019

AbstractAnimacy is one of the basic semantic features of word meaning and influences perceptual and episodic memory processes. However, evidence that this variable also influences lexicosemantic processing is mixed. As animacy is a semantic variable thought to have evolutionary roots, we first examined its influence in a semantic categorization task that did not make the animacy dimension salient, namely, concrete-abstract categorization. Animates were categorized faster (and more accurately) than inanimates. We then assessed the influence of animacy in two lexical decision experiments. In Experiment 2, we mostly used legal nonwords, whereas in Experiment 3, we varied the context of the non…

Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)[SCCO.LING]Cognitive science/Linguistics050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCategorizationSalientPerception[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyLexical decision taskSemantic memory0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimacyPsychologyEpisodic memory030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_common
researchProduct

Students’ Interpretations of a Persuasive Multimodal Video About Vaccines

2021

The present study investigated students’ (N = 404) interpretations of the main message and use of modes in a persuasive multimodal video on vaccines. It also examined whether students’ topic knowledge, language arts grades, and self-identified gender were associated with their interpretations. Students analyzed a YouTube video in which two entertainers demonstrated the importance of vaccinating children. Students’ interpretations of the usefulness of vaccines varied in terms of quality of reasoning, which was associated with students’ topic knowledge. Notably, many students’ interpretations of the use of modes were incomplete, or they did not even mention certain modes in their response. Th…

Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subject050801 communication & media studiesThinking skillsLanguage and LinguisticsLiteracyEducationArgumentation theoryMultimodality0508 media and communicationsnuoretargumentationMathematics educationComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONadolescentsmedialukutaitomultimodalitymultimodaalisuusDigital literacymedia_commonLanguage arts4. Education05 social sciences050301 educationComprehensionymmärtäminenmonilukutaito5141 SociologyTask analysisargumentointi516 Educational sciencescomprehensionPsychology0503 education
researchProduct

Is perception a two-way street ?The case of feedback consistency in visual word recognition

1998

It is generally assumed that during reading, the activation produced over orthographic units feeds forward to phonological units. Supporting interactive models of word recognition, Stone, Vanhoy, and Van Orden (1997) recently claimed that phonological activation reverberates to orthographic processing units and consequently constrains orthographic encoding. They found that the consistency of the relations between phonology and orthography (feedback consistency) influenced lexical decision performance. We explored the effect in five experiments conducted with French words. Although feedback consistency affected writing performance, no significant effect was observed in lexical decision even …

Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPhonologyLanguage and LinguisticsWord lists by frequencyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyConsistency (negotiation)PsychologieArtificial IntelligencePerceptionReading (process)Word recognitionLexical decision taskPsychologyPsychologie cognitiveOrthographyCognitive psychologymedia_common
researchProduct

Are syllables phonological units in visual word recognition?

2004

A number of studies have shown that syllables play an important role in visual word recognition in Spanish. We report three lexical decision experiments with a masked priming technique that examined whether syllabic effects are phonological or orthographic in nature. In all cases, primes were nonwords. In Experiment 1, latencies to CV words were faster when primes and targets shared the first syllable (€ju.nas-JU.NIO) than when they shared the initial letters but not the first syllable (€jun.tu-JU.NIO). In Experiment 2, this syllabic overlap could be phonological+orthographical (vi.rel-VI.RUS) or just phonological (bi.rel-VI.RUS). A syllable priming effect was found for CV words in both the…

Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subjectSpeech recognitionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPhonologyLanguage and LinguisticsEducationReading (process)Lexical decision taskSyllabic verseSyllablePsychologyControl (linguistics)Priming (psychology)Word (group theory)media_commonLanguage and Cognitive Processes
researchProduct

Reading and math skills development among Finnish primary school children before and after COVID-19 school closure

2022

AbstractThis study quantified the possible learning losses in reading and math skills among a sample of Finnish Grade 3 children (n = 198) who spent 8 weeks in distance learning during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in spring 2020. We compared their reading and math skill development trajectories across Grades 1, 2, and 4 to a pre-COVID sample (N = 378). We also examined if gender, parental education, maternal homework involvement, and child’s task-avoidant behavior predict children’s academic skills at Grade 4 differently in the pre-COVID sample compared with the COVID sample. Children’s reading and math skills were tested, mothers reported their education and homework involvement…

Linguistics and Languagetask avoidancematematiikkamathematicsCOVID-19lukeminenEducationSpeech and HearingNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologyreadingetäopetuslukutaitokotitehtävätmatemaattiset taidothomeworkReading and Writing
researchProduct

Examining the developmental dynamics between achievement strategies and different literacy skills

2013

We examined the developmental dynamics between task-avoidant behavior and different literacy outcomes, and possible precursors of task-avoidant behavior. Seventy Greek children were followed from Grade 4 until Grade 6 and were assessed every year on reading fluency, spelling, and reading comprehension. The teachers assessed the children’s achievement strategies at all testing times. In addition, in Grade 4, the children responded to a task value questionnaire and the parents reported their beliefs and expectations about their children’s academic performance. The results revealed that task avoidance was reciprocally related only to reading comprehension. In addition, only parental beliefs p…

Literacy skillSocial PsychologyLiteracy educationmedia_common.quotation_subjectbehavioral disciplines and activitiesEducational attainmentSpellingLiteracyEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental dynamicsDevelopmental NeuroscienceReading comprehensionDevelopmental and Educational Psychologyta516Life-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologyTask avoidanceta515psychological phenomena and processesSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Cognitive psychologymedia_commonInternational Journal of Behavioral Development
researchProduct

Rethinking of the Heuristic-Analytic Dual Process Theory: A Comment on Wada and Nittono (2004) and the Reasoning Process in the Wason Selection Task

2005

This paper raises some methodological problems in the dual process explanation provided by Wada and Nittono for their 2004 results using the Wason selection task. We maintain that the Nittono rethinking approach is weak and that it should be refined to grasp better the evidence of analytic processes.

LogicHeuristicProcess (engineering)Decision MakingGRASPExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDual process theoryDUAL (cognitive architecture)Sensory SystemsWason selection taskDiscrimination LearningPattern Recognition VisualReaction TimeHumansAttentionProbability LearningPsychologyProblem SolvingCognitive psychologyPerceptual and Motor Skills
researchProduct

Algorithmic Solution of Arithmetic Problems and Operands-Answer Associations in Long-Term Memory

2001

Many developmental models of arithmetic problem solving assume that any algorithmic solution of a given problem results in an association of the two operands and the answer in memory (Logan & Klapp, 1991; Siegler, 1996). In this experiment, adults had to perform either an operation or a comparison on the same pairs of two-digit numbers and then a recognition task. It is shown that unlike comparisons, the algorithmic solution of operations impairs the recognition of operands in adults. Thus, the postulate of a necessary and automatic storage of operands-answer associations in memory when young children solve additions by algorithmic strategies needs to be qualified.

Long-term memoryRecognition PsychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyOperandTask (project management)MemoryReaction TimeHumansArithmeticPsychologyAssociation (psychology)AlgorithmsMathematicsProblem SolvingGeneral PsychologyThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
researchProduct

Task-motivation during the first school years: A person-oriented approach to longitudinal data

2005

Abstract The present study investigated the kinds of motivational patterns primary school students show in terms of the value they place on math, reading and writing, respectively, and the extent to which these patterns are prospectively associated with academic performance, and related to self-concept of ability. Two-hundred and eleven 6- to 7-year-old children were examined twice during Grade 1, and twice during Grade 2. On each measurement occasion, they were assessed on their performance in reading and math, and on their self-concept of ability and task-motivation in those skills. The clustering-by-states analysis for longitudinal data identified four groups of children: those who place…

Longitudinal datamedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationContext (language use)Academic achievementbehavioral disciplines and activitiesEducationTask (project management)Developmental psychologyPerson orientedReading (process)mental disordersDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyMathematics educationMathematical abilityPsychologyValue (mathematics)psychological phenomena and processesmedia_commonLearning and Instruction
researchProduct

The cross-lagged relations between children’s academic skill development, task-avoidance, and parental beliefs about success.

2011

Abstract This longitudinal study investigated the cross-lagged associations between children’s academic skill development, task-avoidant behaviour in the context of homework, and parental beliefs about their child’s success from kindergarten to Grade 2. The participants were 1267 children. The children’s pre-skills were assessed at the end of the kindergarten year, and math and reading skills at the end of Grade 1 and Grade 2. Parents provided ratings of their beliefs about their children’s school success and task-avoidant behaviour with regard to homework at the end of Grades 1 and 2. The results showed that children’s math and reading skills predicted children’s task-avoidant behaviour re…

Longitudinal studyeducationContext (language use)Predictor variablesSkill developmentbehavioral disciplines and activitiesEducationDevelopmental psychologyMath skillsCross laggedDevelopmental and Educational Psychologyta516PsychologyTask avoidancepsychological phenomena and processesReading skillsta515Learning and Instruction
researchProduct