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Event knowledge,elaborative propensity,and the development of learning proficiency
Authors:William D. Rohwer  Mitchell Rabinowitz  Nina F. Dronkers
Affiliation:Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences USA;University of California, San Diego, USA;University of California, Berkeley, USA
Abstract:An experimental test was made of two hypotheses formulated to account for age differences across adolescence in the learning of arbitrary associations. One hypothesis ascribes such differences to two factors: the propensity to elaborate coherent relationships among initially disparate items, and accessibility to event knowledge that can form the bases of such relationships. The other hypothesis assumes that propensity remains constant across age, and that development stems entirely from increases in the accessibility of relevant event knowledge. These hypotheses are evaluated with reference to the performance of 11- and 17-year-olds in learning relationships among paired nouns. The results discredited both hypotheses, instigating the formulation of a revised conception of the relationship between knowledge and propensity as developmental determinants.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to William D. Rohwer   Jr.   Institute of Human Learning   University of California   Berkeley   CA 94720.
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