نتایج جستجو برای: massed

تعداد نتایج: 424  

Journal: :Science 2011
Jeffrey M Donlea Matthew S Thimgan Yasuko Suzuki Laura Gottschalk Paul J Shaw

Sleep is believed to play an important role in memory consolidation. We induced sleep on demand by expressing the temperature-gated nonspecific cation channel Transient receptor potential cation channel (UAS-TrpA1) in neurons, including those with projections to the dorsal fan-shaped body (FB). When the temperature was raised to 31°C, flies entered a quiescent state that meets the criteria for ...

Journal: :The American journal of occupational therapy : official publication of the American Occupational Therapy Association 2009
Yael Goverover Juan Carlos Arango-Lasprilla Frank G Hillary Nancy Chiaravalloti John Deluca

Research has indicated that many people with traumatic brain injury (TBI) experience learning and memory difficulties because of impairments in the initial acquisition of information. We examined a strategy, the spacing effect, known to enhance new learning in a laboratory setting in healthy control participants (HCs) and in people with TBI. The spacing effect indicates that information is lear...

Journal: :Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition 2004
Lisa K Son

This article investigated individual control of spacing strategies during study. Three predictions were outlined: The spacing hypothesis suggests that people choose to space their study to improve long-term learning via the spacing effect. The massing hypothesis suggests that people choose to mass their study because of illusions of confidence during study. The metacognitive hypothesis suggests...

Journal: :Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition 2014
Neil W Mulligan Daniel J Peterson

Research suggests that spaced learning, compared with massed learning, results in superior long-term retention (the spacing effect). Son (2010) identified a potentially important moderator of the spacing effect: metacognitive control. Specifically, when participants chose massed restudy but were instead forced to space the restudy, the spacing effect disappeared in adults (or was reduced in chi...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2007
Gary T Philips Ekaterina I Tzvetkova Thomas J Carew

Although it is commonly appreciated that spaced training is superior to massed training in memory formation, the molecular mechanisms underlying this feature of memory are largely unknown. We previously described the selective benefit of multiple spaced (vs massed) training trials in the induction of long-term memory (LTM) for sensitization in Aplysia californica. We now report that LTM can be ...

Journal: :Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior 1969

2014
Carole L. Yue Benjamin C. Storm Elizabeth Ligon Bjork

Use of highlighting is a prevalent study strategy among students, but evidence regarding its benefit for learning is mixed. We examined highlighting in relation to distributed study and students’ attitudes about highlighting as a study strategy. Participants read a text passage twice while highlighting or not, with their readings either distributed or massed, and followed by a week-delayed test...

Journal: :Memory & cognition 2011
Christopher N Wahlheim John Dunlosky Larry L Jacoby

In two experiments, we examined spacing effects on the learning of bird families and metacognitive assessments of such learning. Results revealed that spacing enhanced learning beyond massed study. These effects were increased by presenting birds in pairs so as to highlight differences among families during study (Experiment 1). Self-allocated study time provided evidence that more attention wa...

Journal: :Memory 1998
K Braun D C Rubin

The spacing effect in list learning occurs because identical massed items suffer encoding deficits and because spaced items benefit from retrieval and increased time in working memory. Requiring the retrieval of identical items produced a spacing effect for recall and recognition, both for intentional and incidental learning. Not requiring retrieval produced spacing only for intentional learnin...

Journal: :Memory 2014
Matthew C Bell Nader Kawadri Patricia M Simone Melody Wiseheart

Many studies have shown that memory is enhanced when study sessions are spaced apart rather than massed. This spacing effect has been shown to have a lasting benefit to long-term memory when the study phase session follows the encoding session by 24 hours. Using a spacing paradigm we examined the impact of sleep and spacing gaps on long-term declarative memory for Swahili-English word pairs by ...

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