Varieties of frequency interference in children's recognition of sentence information |
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Authors: | Elizabeth S Ghatala Joel R Levin Diane L Truman |
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Affiliation: | University of Houston USA;University of Wisconsin-Madison USA |
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Abstract: | The memory of fourth-grade children (9 years, 10 months of age) for information contained in target sentences presented 24 hours earlier was tested by multiple-choice recognition items each consisting of a question about a target sentence followed by three response options. The options consisted of the correct word from the sentence, a new word, and an old, incorrect word that was contained in another sentence on the study trial. The results indicated that the amount of interference produced by old information depended upon the relationship between the sentence in which the old information occurred and the target sentence—being the least when the two were unrelated; the most when the two shared the same subject noun (which also occurred in the stem of the test item for the target sentence); and intermediate when the subjects of the two sentences were synonyms. The interference produced by these manipulations was moderated by instructional strategies and the distance between the target sentence and its variation. The experiment establishes the validity of contextual frequency accrual, a construct logically necessary in extending frequency theory to recognition of information contained in sentences. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be addressed to Elizabeth S. Ghatala Foundations of Education School of Education University of Houston Houston TX. 77004. |
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