17 results on '"Kole JA"'
Search Results
2. Astronaut Candidate, Candidate-Like, and Undergraduate Subjects Compared on Retention and Transfer.
- Author
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Kole JA, Barshi I, Healy AF, and Schneider VI
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Cognition, Astronauts psychology, Students
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The present study examined long-term retention and transfer of knowledge and skills, as well as the effect of cognitive load on retention and transfer, using a sample of astronaut candidates and two comparison groups. The first comparison group, recruited from Johnson Space Center, was similar in age, education, and general health to the astronaut candidate group; the second comparison group included university undergraduate students. METHODS: This study employed two different tasks-a simple perceptual-motor task involving data entry and a complex memory updating task requiring both prospective and retrospective memory. Subjects completed multiple sessions involving both tasks over a 500-d period, with test sessions involving transfer and/or a cognitive load manipulation. For the perceptual-motor task, transfer involved changes to the stimuli that increased intrinsic cognitive load or changes to the required motoric procedures. For the memory updating task, extraneous cognitive load was increased by the addition of a concurrent secondary task. RESULTS: For both the perceptual-motor and memory updating tasks, astronaut candidates and candidate-like subjects performed more accurately, with greater speed, and were less impacted by increased cognitive load than undergraduate students. Despite the generally superior performance of astronaut candidates and candidate-like subjects, they were more likely to experience negative transfer on the perceptual-motor task, whereas undergraduate students demonstrated positive transfer. DISCUSSION: Candidate-like subjects provided a more accurate approximation of astronaut candidate performance than did undergraduate students, especially with regard to negative transfer effects and cognitive load. Kole JA, Barshi I, Healy AF, Schneider VI. Astronaut candidate, candidate-like, and undergraduate subjects compared on retention and transfer . Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2023; 94(12):902-910.
- Published
- 2023
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3. Training, retention, and transfer of data entry perceptual and motor processes over short and long retention intervals.
- Author
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Healy AF, Kole JA, Schneider VI, and Barshi I
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Young Adult, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Practice, Psychological, Retention, Psychology physiology, Transfer, Psychology physiology
- Abstract
In two experiments, subjects trained in a standard data entry task, which involved typing numbers (e.g., 2147) using their right hands. At an initial test (20 min or 6 months after training), subjects completed the standard task, followed by a left-hand variant (typing with their left hands) that involved the same perceptual, but different motoric, processes as the standard task. At a second test (2 days or 8 months after training), subjects completed the standard task, followed by a code variant (translating letters into digits, then typing the digits with their right hands) that involved different perceptual, but the same motoric, processes as the standard task. At test, for each of the three tasks, half the trials were trained numbers (old) and half were new. Repetition priming (faster execution times to old than new numbers) was found for each task, with extended delays only slightly decreasing the magnitude of the effect. Repetition priming for the standard task reflects retention of trained numbers, for the left-hand variant reflects transfer of perceptual processes, and for the code variant reflects transfer of motoric processes. There was, thus, evidence for both specificity and generalizability of training data entry perceptual and motoric processes even over very long retention intervals.
- Published
- 2019
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4. Does spatial information impact immediate verbatim recall of verbal navigation instructions?
- Author
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Schneider VI, Healy AF, Kole JA, and Barshi I
- Subjects
- Humans, Mental Recall physiology, Memory, Short-Term, Movement, Spatial Memory, Spatial Navigation
- Abstract
The present study addresses the issue of whether spatial information impacts immediate verbatim recall of verbal navigation instructions. Subjects heard messages instructing them to move within a two-dimensional depiction of a three-dimensional space consisting of four stacked grids displayed on a computer screen. They repeated the instructions orally and then followed them manually by clicking with a mouse on the grids. Two groups with identical instructions were compared; they differed only in whether the starting position was indicated before or after the instructions were given and repeated, with no differences in the manual movements to be made. Accuracy on both the oral repetition and manual movement responses was significantly higher when the starting position was indicated before the instructions. The results are consistent with the proposal that there is only a single amodal mental representation, rather than distinct verbal and nonverbal representations, of navigation instructions. The advantage for the before condition was found even for the oral repetition responses, implying that the creation of the amodal representation occurred immediately, while the instructions were being held in working memory. In practical terms, the findings imply that being able to form a mental representation of the movement path while being given verbal navigation instructions should substantially facilitate memory for the instructions and execution of them.
- Published
- 2018
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5. Memory load as a cognitive antidote to performance decrements in data entry.
- Author
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Chapman MJ, Healy AF, and Kole JA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Cognition physiology, Memory physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
In two experiments, subjects trained in data entry, typing one 4-digit number at a time. At training, subjects either typed the numbers immediately after they appeared (immediate) or typed the previous number from memory while viewing the next number (delayed). In Experiment 2 stimulus presentation time was limited and either nothing or a space (gap) was inserted between the second and third digits. In both experiments after training, all subjects completed a test with no gap and typed numbers immediately. Training with a memory load improved speed across training blocks (Experiment 1) and eliminated the decline in accuracy across training blocks (Experiment 2), thus serving as a cognitive antidote to performance decrements. An analysis of each keystroke revealed different underlying processes and strategies for the two training conditions, including when encoding took place. Chunking (in which the first and last two digits are treated separately) was more evident in the immediate than in the delayed condition and was exaggerated with a gap, even at test when there was no gap. These results suggest that such two-digit chunking is due to stimulus encoding and motor planning processes as well as memory, and those processes transferred from training to testing.
- Published
- 2016
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6. What's the Problem? Familiarity Working Memory, and Transfer in a Problem-Solving Task.
- Author
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Kole JA, Snyder HR, Brojde CL, and Friend A
- Subjects
- Games, Experimental, Humans, Imagination, Semantics, Memory, Short-Term, Problem Solving, Recognition, Psychology, Transfer, Psychology
- Abstract
The contributions of familiarity and working memory to transfer were examined in the Tower of Hanoi task. Participants completed 3 different versions of the task: a standard 3-disk version, a clothing exchange task that included familiar semantic content, and a tea ceremony task that included unfamiliar semantic content. The constraints on moves were equivalent across tasks, and each could be solved with the same sequence of movements. Working memory demands were manipulated by the provision of a (static or dynamic) visual representation of the problem. Performance was equivalent for the standard Tower of Hanoi and clothing exchange tasks but worse for the tea ceremony task, and it decreased with increasing working memory demands. Furthermore, the standard Tower of Hanoi task and clothing exchange tasks independently, additively, and equivalently transferred to subsequent tasks, whereas the tea ceremony task did not. The results suggest that both familiarity and working memory demands determine overall level of performance, whereas familiarity influences transfer.
- Published
- 2015
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7. Expertise: defined, described, explained.
- Author
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Bourne LE Jr, Kole JA, and Healy AF
- Published
- 2014
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8. Training principles to advance expertise.
- Author
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Healy AF, Kole JA, and Bourne LE Jr
- Published
- 2014
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9. Is retrieval mediated after repeated testing?
- Author
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Kole JA and Healy AF
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time physiology, Semantics, Students, Universities, Verbal Learning, Vocabulary, Decision Making physiology, Mental Recall physiology
- Abstract
In 2 main experiments, the mediated priming effect was used to determine whether retrieval continues to be mediated after repeated testing. In each experiment, participants used the keyword method to learn French vocabulary, then completed a modified lexical decision task in which they first translated a French word, and then made a lexical decision on a semantic associate either of the keyword or of the English translation, a semantically unrelated word, or a nonword. In Experiment 2, the amount of testing was varied before the lexical decision task. A mediated priming effect was found with limited testing, consistent with mediated retrieval as proposed by both the working memory mediation model and the mediator effectiveness hypothesis, but not after extended testing, consistent with direct retrieval as proposed by the direct access model., ((c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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10. Conserving time in the classroom: the clicker technique.
- Author
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Anderson LS, Healy AF, Kole JA, and Bourne LE
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Educational Measurement, Female, Humans, Male, Time Factors, Universities, Computer-Assisted Instruction, Learning, Students psychology, Teaching
- Abstract
Any technique that conserves classroom instructional time without sacrificing the amount learned is of great educational value. This research compared a laboratory analogue of the clicker technique to analogues of other classroom pedagogical methods that all involve repeated testing during teaching. The clicker analogue mimics the classroom practice of dropping material that is understood by the majority of the class, as revealed by testing with clicker questions, from further lecture. A fact learning and retrieval paradigm was used, in which college students learned facts about unfamiliar countries. Compressing instruction time based on group-level performance produced as much learning as no compression and as compression based on individual-level performance. Results suggest that the clicker technique is an efficient and cost-effective method of conserving instructional time without loss of amount learned.
- Published
- 2011
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11. Memory for details about people: familiarity, relatedness, and gender congruency.
- Author
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Kole JA and Healy AF
- Subjects
- Family psychology, Female, Friends psychology, Humans, Male, Sex Factors, Twins psychology, Attention, Interpersonal Relations, Memory, Short-Term, Recognition, Psychology, Retention, Psychology
- Abstract
This study examines factors that influence memory for details about people. In two experiments, subjects learned fictitious details about familiar (friends, relatives) and/or unfamiliar individuals, and were tested both immediately and after a 1-week delay. To control for a confounding between familiarity and genetic relatedness in Experiment 1, in Experiment 2 specific relationships (identical twin, first cousin, acquaintance) were assigned to unfamiliar individuals. Across experiments, retention was enhanced for familiar compared to unfamiliar individuals, for friends/acquaintances compared to relatives, for more closely than distantly related individuals, and for individuals of the opposite gender as the subject.
- Published
- 2011
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12. Contextual memory and skill transfer in category search.
- Author
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Kole JA, Healy AF, Fierman DM, and Bourne LE Jr
- Subjects
- Attention, Humans, Reaction Time, Retention, Psychology, Association Learning, Mental Recall, Psychomotor Performance, Semantics, Transfer, Psychology, Verbal Learning
- Abstract
In three experiments, we examined transfer and contextual memory in a category search task. Each experiment included two phases (training and test), during which participants searched through category and exemplar menus for targets. In Experiment 1, the targets were from one of two domains during training (grocery store or department store); the domain was either the same or changed at test. Also, the categories were organized in one of two ways (alphabetically or semantically); the organization either remained the same or changed at test. In Experiments 2 and 3, domain and organization were held constant; however, categories or exemplars were the same, partially replaced, or entirely replaced across phases in order to simulate the dynamic nature of category search in everyday situations. Transfer occurred at test when the category organization or domain was maintained and when the categories or exemplars matched (partially or entirely) those at training. These results demonstrate that transfer is facilitated by overlap in training and testing contexts.
- Published
- 2010
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13. The effects of memory set size and information structure on learning and retention.
- Author
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Kole JA and Haly AF
- Subjects
- Humans, Retention, Psychology, Learning, Memory
- Abstract
Two experiments examined the effects of memory set size and information structure on learning and retention. Participants learned 48 (small set) or 144 (large set) facts about individuals, and were tested over 48 facts. The test facts included either 4 facts about 12 individuals (12-person condition) or 12 facts about 4 individuals (4-person condition). During learning, there was an advantage for the small-set group in the 4-person condition, but a disadvantage in the 12-person condition. During testing, there was an advantage for the 4-person condition relative to the 12-person condition for the small-set group, even when the conditions were equated in terms of name exposure. The results support a mental model account of memory representation and retrieval.
- Published
- 2007
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14. Using prior knowledge to minimize interference when learning large amounts of information.
- Author
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Kole JA and Healy AF
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Cognition, Learning, Mental Processes
- Abstract
In three experiments, we examined mediated learning in situations involving learning a large amount of information. Participants learned 144 "facts" during a learning phase and were tested on facts during a test phase. In Experiments 1 and 2, participants learned facts about familiar individuals, unfamiliar individuals, or unfamiliar individuals associated with familiar individuals. Prior knowledge reduced interference, even when it played only a mediating role. In Experiment 3, participants learned facts about unfamiliar individuals or unfamiliar countries, with half the participants in each group associating the unfamiliar items with familiar individuals. Again, use of prior knowledge to mediate learning reduced interference even when the new information was conceptually dissimilar to the previously known information. These results are consistent with the mental model account of long-term memory.
- Published
- 2007
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15. Short-term recall of order information: influence of encoding and generation processes on distinctiveness, isolation, and background effects.
- Author
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Cunningham TF, Healy AF, and Kole JA
- Subjects
- Cues, Humans, Mental Recall, Memory, Short-Term, Psychology methods
- Abstract
We examined the influence of encoding and generation processes on distinctiveness, isolation, and background effects in short-term recall of order information. Adults recalled the order of letters in one of two segments following a distractor task, knowing in advance the identity of the letters. A distinctive letter was one that was either in red or absent and replaced with a red dash, thereby requiring generation. On trials with a distinctive letter, the letter was primed in advance. A negative generation effect was found; in addition, there was a positive distinctiveness effect but a negative background effect on trials in which generation was required. These effects can be explained in terms of the extra processing given to distinctive items when they need to be generated.
- Published
- 2005
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16. Does number data entry rely on the phonological loop?
- Author
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Kole JA, Healy AF, and Buck-Gengler CJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Learning, Microcomputers, Models, Psychological, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time, Speech, Memory, Short-Term, Phonetics, Psychomotor Performance
- Abstract
Two experiments investigated effects of articulatory processing on number data entry. Participants entered four-digit numbers presented as either words or numerals on a keyboard, either under an articulatory condition or in silence. In Experiment 1, the articulatory condition was articulatory suppression; in Experiment 2, it was vocalisation. In Experiment 1, the articulatory suppression group typed initial digits faster than the silent group, but for subsequent digits, the opposite pattern occurred at least with word stimuli. In Experiment 2, the silent group typed initial digits faster but typed subsequent digits somewhat slower than the vocalisation group. Thus, articulation of numbers, which promotes entry into the phonological loop of working memory, retards processing of initial digits but enhances processing of subsequent digits.
- Published
- 2005
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17. Effects of prolonged work on data entry speed and accuracy.
- Author
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Healy AF, Kole JA, Buck-Gengle CJ, and Bourne LE Jr
- Subjects
- Humans, Computers, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time
- Abstract
In 2 experiments, participants used a keyboard to enter 4-digit numbers presented on a computer monitor under conditions promoting fatigue. In Experiment 1, accuracy of data entry declined but response times improved over time, reflecting an increasing speed-accuracy trade-off. In Experiment 2, the (largely cognitive) time to enter the initial digit decreased in the 1st half but increased in the 2nd half of the session. Accuracy and time to enter the remaining digits decreased across though not within session halves. The (largely motoric) time to press a concluding keystroke decreased over the session. Thus, through a combination of facilitation and inhibition, prolonged work affects the component cognitive and motoric processes of data entry differentially and at different points in practice., ((c) 2004 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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