Three experiments examined developmental changes in serial recall of lists of 6 letters, with errors classified as movements, omissions, intrusions, or repetitions. In Experiments 1 and 2, developmental differences between groups of children aged from 7 to 11 years and adults were found in the pattern of serial recall errors. The errors of older participants were more likely to be movements than were those of younger participants, who made more intrusions and omissions. The number of repetition errors did not change with age, and this finding is interpreted in terms of a developmentally invariant postoutput response inhibition process. This interpretation was supported by the findings of Experiment 3, which measured levels of response inhib...
Th result of recognition tests on 4- and 6-year-olds resulted in a forgetting curve for 6-year olds ...
The assumption of some developmental theories that short‐term memory is the workspace of higher cogn...
Eighty nursery school children were randomly divided into four groups of 20 and given a serial short...
A model of adult human memory, OSCAR, is applied to the development of memory for serial order. In t...
Three experiments were conducted to examine the effect of age (4-5 and 6-8 years) and retention inte...
Age-related deficits in short-term memory have been widely reported, but reduced overall scores coul...
The effects of differeit levels of rehearsal quality on serial recall, over and above simple labelin...
Detailed analysis of errors in the serial recall of lists of items reveals that older adults make si...
Two studies examined serial recall process first-grade Canadian children from inner-city and suburba...
Although much is known about the critical importance of active verbal rehearsal for successful recal...
The first purpose of present study were to develop the children's scale for assessing individual dif...
textabstractIn this study we investigated whether we could distinguish the use of specific verbal an...
Five experiments examined how the developmental reversal in false memories typically seen in Deese-R...
This paper describes a series of studies which examine the early development of recall. Subjects I/e...
When, after study of an item list, adults are cued to forget some of the list items and encode new i...
Th result of recognition tests on 4- and 6-year-olds resulted in a forgetting curve for 6-year olds ...
The assumption of some developmental theories that short‐term memory is the workspace of higher cogn...
Eighty nursery school children were randomly divided into four groups of 20 and given a serial short...
A model of adult human memory, OSCAR, is applied to the development of memory for serial order. In t...
Three experiments were conducted to examine the effect of age (4-5 and 6-8 years) and retention inte...
Age-related deficits in short-term memory have been widely reported, but reduced overall scores coul...
The effects of differeit levels of rehearsal quality on serial recall, over and above simple labelin...
Detailed analysis of errors in the serial recall of lists of items reveals that older adults make si...
Two studies examined serial recall process first-grade Canadian children from inner-city and suburba...
Although much is known about the critical importance of active verbal rehearsal for successful recal...
The first purpose of present study were to develop the children's scale for assessing individual dif...
textabstractIn this study we investigated whether we could distinguish the use of specific verbal an...
Five experiments examined how the developmental reversal in false memories typically seen in Deese-R...
This paper describes a series of studies which examine the early development of recall. Subjects I/e...
When, after study of an item list, adults are cued to forget some of the list items and encode new i...
Th result of recognition tests on 4- and 6-year-olds resulted in a forgetting curve for 6-year olds ...
The assumption of some developmental theories that short‐term memory is the workspace of higher cogn...
Eighty nursery school children were randomly divided into four groups of 20 and given a serial short...