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53 results on '"Wahlheim CN"'

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1. Semantic relatedness proactively benefits learning, memory, and interdependence across episodes.

2. Remembering change: Interdependence between change awareness and meaningful connection in achieving proactive facilitation.

3. A response time model of the three-choice Mnemonic Similarity Task provides stable, mechanistically interpretable individual-difference measures.

4. Correcting fake news headlines after repeated exposure: memory and belief accuracy in younger and older adults.

5. Memory and belief updating following complete and partial reminders of fake news.

6. On the role of memory in misinformation corrections: Repeated exposure, correction durability, and source credibility.

7. PEPPR: A post-encoding pre-production reinstatement model of dual-list free recall.

8. Testing can enhance episodic memory updating in younger and older adults.

9. Mnemonic discrimination deficits in multidimensional schizotypy.

10. Adult age differences in event memory updating: The roles of prior-event retrieval and prediction.

11. Interpolated retrieval retroactively increases recall and promotes cross-episode memory interdependence.

12. Impaired mnemonic discrimination in children and adolescents at risk for schizophrenia.

13. Self-reported encoding quality promotes lure rejections and false alarms.

14. Stuck in the past? Rumination-related memory integration.

15. Adult age differences in subjective context retrieval in dual-list free recall.

16. Fake news reminders and veracity labels differentially benefit memory and belief accuracy for news headlines.

17. Recalling fake news during real news corrections can impair or enhance memory updating: the role of recollection-based retrieval.

18. Understanding Everyday Events: Predictive-Looking Errors Drive Memory Updating.

19. Episodic memory impairment in children and adolescents at risk for schizophrenia: A role for context processing.

20. Intrinsic functional connectivity in the default mode network predicts mnemonic discrimination: A connectome-based modeling approach.

21. The role of prior-event retrieval in encoding changed event features.

22. Directing attention to event changes improves memory updating for older adults.

23. Aging and the encoding of changes in events: The role of neural activity pattern reinstatement.

24. Reminders of Everyday Misinformation Statements Can Enhance Memory for and Beliefs in Corrections of Those Statements in the Short Term.

25. The role of reminding in retroactive effects of memory for older and younger adults.

26. The role of attentional fluctuation during study in recollecting episodic changes at test.

27. The effect of physical activity on cognition relative to APOE genotype (PAAD-2): study protocol for a phase II randomized control trial.

28. Individual and age differences in block-by-block dynamics of category learning strategies.

29. Adult age differences in the use of temporal and semantic context in dual-list free recall.

30. Reminders can enhance or impair episodic memory updating: a memory-for-change perspective.

31. Interpolated retrieval effects on list isolation: Individual differences in working memory capacity.

32. Memory guides the processing of event changes for older and younger adults.

33. Adult age differences in production and monitoring in dual-list free recall.

34. Study preferences for exemplar variability in self-regulated category learning.

35. Characterizing adult age differences in the initiation and organization of retrieval: A further investigation of retrieval dynamics in dual-list free recall.

36. Category learning strategies in younger and older adults: Rule abstraction and memorization.

37. Age differences in the focus of retrieval: Evidence from dual-list free recall.

38. Memory consequences of looking back to notice change: Retroactive and proactive facilitation.

39. Simultaneous Versus Sequential Presentation in Testing Recognition Memory for Faces.

40. Testing can counteract proactive interference by integrating competing information.

41. Memory for flip-flopping: detection and recollection of political contradictions.

42. Proactive effects of memory in young and older adults: the role of change recollection.

43. The role of reminding in the effects of spaced repetitions on cued recall: sufficient but not necessary.

44. The role of detection and recollection of change in list discrimination.

45. On the importance of looking back: the role of recursive remindings in recency judgments and cued recall.

46. Self-regulated learning of a natural category: do people interleave or block exemplars during study?

47. Remembering change: the critical role of recursive remindings in proactive effects of memory.

48. Metacognitive judgments of repetition and variability effects in natural concept learning: evidence for variability neglect.

49. Predicting memory performance under conditions of proactive interference: immediate and delayed judgments of learning.

50. Spacing enhances the learning of natural concepts: an investigation of mechanisms, metacognition, and aging.

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