The Ss in 2 experiments first learned a PA list of words as responses to nonsense syllables. In 1 condition the words differed in meaningfulness (M) and in the other condition the words differed in pleasantness (PL). Next, Ss learned a 2nd PA list of the same syllables as responses to numbers. High-M words were learned faster than low-M words, but did not transfer either this difference in learning or the difference in rated M to the syllables. Pleasant words were learned faster than indifferent words in one experiment (men’s) but not in the other (women’s). In neither experiment did the words transfer their difference in learning to the syllables, but in the men’s experiment they did transfer the difference in rated PL
Déjà vu is a nebulous memory experience defined by a clash between evaluations of familiarity and no...
Published: March 2022Does saying a novel word help to recognize it later? Previous research on the e...
The Lexical Quality Hypothesis suggests that the difficulties exhibited by poor readers cascade from...
The Ss in 2 experiments first learned a PA list of words as responses to nonsense syllables. In 1 co...
48 female in 1 experiment and 32 male undergraduates in another 1st learned a paired-associate (PA) ...
Conducted 3 paired-associate learning experiments, with a total of 228 undergraduates, in which nons...
Conducted 4 experiments with 240 male undergraduates in which nonsense syllables 1st acquired differ...
Background Certain manipulations, such as testing oneself on newly learned word associations (recall...
We review recent artificial language learning studies, especially those following Endress and Bonatt...
2014-07-14How learners map words to meanings is a central question in language acquisition. Yu & Smi...
Sensible, interrelated sentences were presented with or without bizarre sentences that could be tran...
Learning is often accompanied by a subjective sense of confidence in one's knowledge, a feeling of k...
Memory traces for words are frequently conceptualized neurobiologically as networks of neurons inte...
Pseudowords (words that are not real but resemble real words in a language) have been used increasin...
The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that positive transfer is a function of the de...
Déjà vu is a nebulous memory experience defined by a clash between evaluations of familiarity and no...
Published: March 2022Does saying a novel word help to recognize it later? Previous research on the e...
The Lexical Quality Hypothesis suggests that the difficulties exhibited by poor readers cascade from...
The Ss in 2 experiments first learned a PA list of words as responses to nonsense syllables. In 1 co...
48 female in 1 experiment and 32 male undergraduates in another 1st learned a paired-associate (PA) ...
Conducted 3 paired-associate learning experiments, with a total of 228 undergraduates, in which nons...
Conducted 4 experiments with 240 male undergraduates in which nonsense syllables 1st acquired differ...
Background Certain manipulations, such as testing oneself on newly learned word associations (recall...
We review recent artificial language learning studies, especially those following Endress and Bonatt...
2014-07-14How learners map words to meanings is a central question in language acquisition. Yu & Smi...
Sensible, interrelated sentences were presented with or without bizarre sentences that could be tran...
Learning is often accompanied by a subjective sense of confidence in one's knowledge, a feeling of k...
Memory traces for words are frequently conceptualized neurobiologically as networks of neurons inte...
Pseudowords (words that are not real but resemble real words in a language) have been used increasin...
The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that positive transfer is a function of the de...
Déjà vu is a nebulous memory experience defined by a clash between evaluations of familiarity and no...
Published: March 2022Does saying a novel word help to recognize it later? Previous research on the e...
The Lexical Quality Hypothesis suggests that the difficulties exhibited by poor readers cascade from...