Desirable difficulties initiate learning processes that foster performance. Such a desirable difficulty is generation, e.g., filling in deleted letters in a deleted letter text. Likewise, letter deletion is a manipulation of processing fluency: A deleted letter text is more difficult to process than an intact text. Disfluency theory also supposes that disfluency initiates analytic processes and thus, improves performance. However, performance is often not affected but, rather, monitoring is affected. The aim of this study is to propose a specification of the effects of disfluency as a desirable difficulty: We suppose that mentally filling in deleted letters activates analytic monitoring but not necessarily analytic cognitive processing and ...
Upon hearing a disfluent referring expression, listeners expect the speaker to refer to an object th...
Prior research suggests that reducing font clarity can cause people to consider printed information ...
Desirable difficulties, coined by Bjork (1994), includes concepts such as spacing learning, interlea...
Desirable difficulties initiate learning processes that foster performance. Such a desirable difficu...
Cognitive challenges that are presented through the modification of established design principles ma...
Fluency is the concept of how easily information is processed. How fluent stimuli are can effect man...
The disfluency effect postulates that intentionally inserted desirable difficulties can have a benef...
Prior research has suggested that perceptual disfluency activates analytical processing and increase...
Everyday speech is littered with disfluencies such as filled pauses, silent pauses, repetitions and...
Recent work has begun to focus on the role that individual differences in executive function and int...
Fluency refers to the subjective ease with which information is processed. Conversely, disfluency de...
The importance of self-regulation in human behavior is readily apparent and diverse theoretical acco...
Everyday speech is littered with disfluencies such as filled pauses, silent pauses, repetitions and ...
The importance of self-regulation in human behaviour is readily apparent and diverse theoretical acc...
This dissertation investigates the role of processing fluency in human judgment; it consists of thre...
Upon hearing a disfluent referring expression, listeners expect the speaker to refer to an object th...
Prior research suggests that reducing font clarity can cause people to consider printed information ...
Desirable difficulties, coined by Bjork (1994), includes concepts such as spacing learning, interlea...
Desirable difficulties initiate learning processes that foster performance. Such a desirable difficu...
Cognitive challenges that are presented through the modification of established design principles ma...
Fluency is the concept of how easily information is processed. How fluent stimuli are can effect man...
The disfluency effect postulates that intentionally inserted desirable difficulties can have a benef...
Prior research has suggested that perceptual disfluency activates analytical processing and increase...
Everyday speech is littered with disfluencies such as filled pauses, silent pauses, repetitions and...
Recent work has begun to focus on the role that individual differences in executive function and int...
Fluency refers to the subjective ease with which information is processed. Conversely, disfluency de...
The importance of self-regulation in human behavior is readily apparent and diverse theoretical acco...
Everyday speech is littered with disfluencies such as filled pauses, silent pauses, repetitions and ...
The importance of self-regulation in human behaviour is readily apparent and diverse theoretical acc...
This dissertation investigates the role of processing fluency in human judgment; it consists of thre...
Upon hearing a disfluent referring expression, listeners expect the speaker to refer to an object th...
Prior research suggests that reducing font clarity can cause people to consider printed information ...
Desirable difficulties, coined by Bjork (1994), includes concepts such as spacing learning, interlea...