Search results for "Word Association Tests"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Analogical reasoning and aging: the processing speed and inhibition hypothesis.

2014

This study was designed to investigate the effect of aging on analogical reasoning by manipulating the strength of semantic association (LowAssoc or HighAssoc) and the number of distracters' semantic analogies of the A:B::C:D type and to determine which factors might be responsible for the age-related differences on analogical reasoning by testing two different theoretical frameworks: the inhibition hypothesis and the speed mediation hypothesis. We compared young adults and two groups of aging people (old and old-old) with word analogies of the A:B::C:D format. Results indicate an age-related effect on analogical reasoning, this effect being greatest with LowAssoc analogies. It was not asso…

Analogical reasoningAdultMaleMediation (statistics)AgingInjury controlAccident preventionAnalogyPoison controlWord Association TestsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySemantic associationDevelopmental psychologyYoung AdultReaction TimeHumansProblem SolvingAgedAged 80 and overMiddle AgedSemanticsPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyFemaleGeriatrics and GerontologyPsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyNeuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section B, Aging, neuropsychology and cognition
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Lexical decision tasks in depressive patients: semantic priming before and after clinical improvement.

2002

SummaryThis study was designed to evaluate the effect of semantic priming with a lexical decision task in 22 depressed patients (DSM-III-R, 1987) and 30 control subjects. These patients were evaluated twice: first when they arrived at the hospital, and secondly, after clinical improvement. Clinical improvement was evaluated using standard depression rating scales. A lexical decision task involving semantic relations (related vs. unrelated, e.g., apple-pear) was used to evaluate the processing of semantic information. The results showed that, for the first evaluation, the depressives presented similar semantic priming to control subjects. When we compared semantic priming in the first and th…

AdultMalePopulationDecision MakingWord Association TestsNeuropsychological TestsDevelopmental psychologyThinking03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRating scaleLexical decision taskmedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineSemantic informationeducationeducation.field_of_studyDepressive DisorderPsychomotor retardationCognitionMiddle AgedControl subjectsPaired-Associate Learning030227 psychiatrySemanticsPsychiatry and Mental healthCase-Control StudiesFemaleFrancemedicine.symptomPsychologyPriming (psychology)Psychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyEuropean psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists
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Temporal stability of the implicit association test-anxiety.

2005

The Implicit Association Test-Anxiety (IAT-Anxiety; Egloff & Schmukle, 2002) provides an indirect assessment of anxiety by measuring associations of self (vs. other) with anxiety-related (vs. calmness-related) words. In 3 studies (using 3 independent samples), we examined the temporal stability of the IAT-Anxiety. In Study 1, 65 participants responded twice to the IAT-Anxiety with a time lag of 1 week. The test-retest correlation was .58. In Study 2 (N = 39), we extended the time interval between test and retest to 1 month and this yielded a stability coefficient of .62. In Study 3 (N = 36), we examined the long-term stability (time lag: 1 year) of the IAT-Anxiety and this showed a correlat…

AdultMalePsychometricsHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectWord Association TestsPersonality AssessmentStability (probability)Developmental psychologyCorrelationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)GermanymedicinePersonalityHumansmedia_commonImplicit-association testAnxiety DisordersTest (assessment)Clinical PsychologyAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomPersonality Assessment InventoryPsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of personality assessment
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Visual letter similarity effects during sentence reading: Evidence from the boundary technique

2018

The study of how the cognitive system encodes letter identities from the visual input has received much attention in models of visual word recognition but it has typically been overlooked in models of eye movement control in reading. Here we examined how visual letter similarity affects early word processing during reading using Rayner's (1975) boundary change technique in which the parafoveal preview of the target word was either identical (e.g., frito-frito [fried]) or a one-letter-different nonword (e.g., frjto-frito vs. frgto-frito). Critically, the substituted letter in the nonword was visually similar (based on letter confusability norms) or visually dissimilar. Results showed shorter…

MaleEye MovementsComputer scienceSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectWord processingWord Association TestsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyFixation Ocular050105 experimental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)FovealReading (process)Similarity (psychology)Developmental and Educational PsychologyHumansAttention0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesConfusionControl (linguistics)media_common05 social sciencesEye movementGeneral MedicinePattern Recognition VisualReadingWord recognitionFemale030217 neurology & neurosurgeryWord (computer architecture)Acta Psychologica
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