• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 289
  • 61
  • 44
  • 43
  • 23
  • 20
  • 10
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 631
  • 162
  • 48
  • 46
  • 46
  • 43
  • 42
  • 41
  • 41
  • 41
  • 41
  • 35
  • 35
  • 34
  • 32
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Priming of eye movements by masked stimuli

Schwarzbach, Jens. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Braunschweig, Techn. University, Diss., 1999.
2

Influence of post-prime cues on masked repetition priming

Wang, Jin. 10 April 2008 (has links)
I present evidence that masked repetition priming of word identification can be modulated by post-prime cues. Cues consisted of targets presented in black, with repetition and unrelated primes equally likely for such targets, or in a color that was correlated with type of prime (e.g., red = repetition prime, green = unrelated prime). There was an increase in response latency for targets with unrelated primes and a decrease in response latency to targets with repetition primes when target color was correlated with type of prime. In this correlation condition, subjects exhibited a larger reliance on the prime for target processing. In the condition where target color was unrelated to prime type, subjects had less reliance on the prime and processed the target more independently.
3

Serial position effects in implicit and explicit memory tests

Brooks, Barbara M. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
4

Blir konsumenter undermedvetet påverkade av reklam i TV-serier? : En kvantitativ studie om subliminal priming

Flinkman, Veronica, Mårtensson, Nicole January 2015 (has links)
Med marknader som blir allt mer globaliserade skapas fler möjligheter för företagen att etablera sig i världen samtidigt. Detta har även lett till en hårdare konkurrens vilket skapat svårigheter för företagen att sticka ut och göra sig hörda bland mängden. Med dessa ökande svårigheter kan därför subliminal priming tänkas vara ett praktiskt verktyg för att nå ut till konsumenterna. Subliminal priming handlar om att påverka människors undermedvetna till olika preferenser och beteende och är ett ämne som inom forskarvärlden länge studerats men som fick ett ökat intresse i slutet av 1950-talet. Bland den forskning som bedrivits så har kriterierna behov, motivation, neutralitet samt kort tidsaspekt tagits fram som förutsättningar för att effekt av subliminal priming ska kunna uppstå. Dock finns ännu inte mycket forskning alls kring om subliminal priming går att använda praktiskt i reklamsammanhang eller om det ens fungerar under icke- kontrollerade omständigheter. Syftet med denna studie blev därför att genom en kvantitativ ansats undersöka om produktplacering i TV-serier kan ha någon inverkan som subliminal priming i dagens samhälle, om de kriterier som forskarna lagt fram är krav för att konsumenterna ska vara mottagliga för att låta sig påverkas eller ej och om uppmärksammande om produktplacering skapar negativ förändring på attityd. Genomförandet skedde genom att studenter tilldelades en webbenkät där de bland annat fick gradera sina törst-behov och titta på ett klipp från “Orange is the new black”. Slutresultaten indikerade på att produktplaceringen i detta TV-serieklipp kunde ha effekt som subliminal priming när respondenterna uppfyllde alla kriterierna men även då endast några av kriterierna uppfylldes.
5

Syntaktisk priming i svensk L1- och L2-produktion / Syntactic priming in Swedish L1 and L2 production

Iversen, Ingrid January 2015 (has links)
En rad studier som har undersökt syntaktisk priming som fenomen och metod har genomförts framför allt med L1- och L2-engelska. Kan man se effekter av syntaktisk priming inom L2, även när L2 är svenska? Finns det någon skillnad mellan effekterna av priming i en grupp deltagare med svenska som L2, jämfört med effekterna i en grupp deltagare med svenska som L1? Kan man finna samband mellan olika bakgrundsfaktorer som vistelsetid, omfattning av språkanvändning respektive språkbehärskning och effekter av priming i en grupp svenska som L2-talare? För att finna svar på dessa frågor genomfördes ett experiment med syntaktisk priming. Ett fyrtiotal gymnasieelever uppmanades skriva meningar till bilder, sedan de primats med morfologiska passiver. Resultaten av experimentet visar på tydliga primingeffekter i linje med tidigare studier: Det finns primingeffekter både inom L1- och L2-svenska, detta trots att den undersökta grammatiska konstruktionen är av annat slag än de som legat till grund för tidigare forskning.
6

The storage of primed lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) seeds

Chen, Yuhsin January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
7

An experimental study of semantics and affect in schizophrenic patients with delusions

Rossell, Susan Lee January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
8

The acquisition of second language word form : a cognitive perspective

Speciale, Giovanna January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
9

Förankring och emotionell priming vid bedömning av bilder

Eriksson, Fredrik January 2016 (has links)
Detta examensarbete undersöker effekten av emotionell priming när försökspersonen använderen bedömningsskala som förankrat bedömningar av upplevd skönhet. Tio försökspersoner fick bedöma skönhet hos bilder med varierande emotionellt innehåll. Något entydigt svar på om, och i så fall hur mycket bedömningarna påverkades av emotionellt innehåll genom en priming-effekt gick inte fastställa, men en tendens till effekt av priming påvisades. Förklaringar som främst gäller metodiska begränsningar diskuteras.
10

Morphological awareness and spelling development

Rosa, J. M. S. January 2003 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to analyse the relation between morphological awareness and morphologically based spellings, in Portuguese (European Variant). Two situations where the spelling is determined by morphology are examined: when the spelling flouts letter-sound correspondence rules (consistency in the spelling of stems in base and in derived forms), and when there is more than one spelling for the same sound (discrimination in the spelling of homophone suffixes). The studies used cross-sectional (studies 1, 2 and 6) and longitudinal (studies 3, 4 and 5) designs. Study 1 examines when children from grades 1 to 4 (6- to 9-year-olds; N = 805) can take advantage of morphological information that is made available to them, implicitly, through morphological priming. The primes are base forms that share the same stem with the targets and contain well articulated, stressed vowels. The target words and pseudo-words are derived forms that contain non-stressed schwa vowels. Although differently pronounced the latter vowels are spelled consistently with those in the stems of the base forms. Primes were either oral or oral plus written. Priming effects were assessed by comparison with a non-primed condition. No priming effects were detected in 6- and 7-year-old children. Both priming conditions produced a significantly higher level of correct spelling in children 8 and 9 years of age. Oral plus written primes allowed older children to use morphological spellings in both words and pseudo-words. These results suggest that older children can use implicit morphological information to spell schwa vowels morphologically. Study 2 examined the concurrent relations between morphological awareness and morphologically based spellings. Two issues were considered: consistency in the spelling of stems in base and derived (or pseudo-derived) forms and discrimination in the spelling of words and pseudo-words ending in homophone suffixes. Children from grades 1 to 3 (6 to 8-year-olds; N = 184) participated in the study. It was found that there was a significant relation between morphological awareness and consistency in the spelling of stems in Base - Pseudo-derived stimuli, after controlling for differences in grade and IQ. Mixed results were found for the spelling of homophone suffixes. The only significant prediction obtained was between morphological awareness and discrimination in the spelling of the words ending in the homophone suffixes '-esa'/ '-eza'. In Study 3, the relation between morphological awareness and consistency in the spelling of stems is analysed, longitudinally. Children from grades 1 to 4 (6- to 9-year-olds; N = 184) were assessed in three sessions (A, B and C) each separated by six months. The results showed that some of the measures of morphological awareness could predict consistency in the spelling of stems over periods of six and of twelve months, after controlling for shared variance with Grade and IQ. This is indicative of a strong link between morphological awareness and consistency in the spelling of stems. In study 4, the relation between morphological awareness and discrimination in the spelling of words and pseudo-words ending in the homophone suffixes '-esa'/ '-eza' is analysed. The suffix '-esa' forms nouns that indicate origin or provenance. The homophone '-eza' forms abstract nouns. The participants and design were the same as in the previous study. It was found that the younger children tended to use one spelling for the two suffixes. Then, when alternative spellings were used, their assignment was unsystematic. Systematic assignment was rare even in the older children. Some measures of morphological awareness in session B, accounted for unique variance in the discrimination scores measured in session C, after controlling for differences explained by grade and IQ. In study 5, the relation between morphological awareness and discrimination in the spelling of words and pseudo-words ending in the homophone suffixes '-ice'/ '-isse' is analysed. The suffix '-ice' forms abstract nouns. The homophone '-isse' is used in the subjunctive of some verbs. The participants and design were the same as before. Correct assignment of suffixes followed the same pattern of spelling phases as described in the previous study. Significant predictions were found between sessions A and B, B and C and A and C. Some of the morphological awareness measures strongly predicted discrimination scores, after controlling for the effects of grade and IQ. Study 6 examines the spelling of older children (Grades 5, 7 and 9) and adults (student-teachers and in-service-teachers (N total = 107). The aim was to find out when consistency in the spelling of stems and discrimination of homophone suffixes were eventually achieved and whether the adult participants were aware of the morphological rules that make discrimination predictable. Consistency in the spelling of stems was only systematic in grade nine. Discrimination of the homophone suffixes '-esa'/ '-eza' was not completely systematic after sixteen years of instruction (student teachers) Discrimination of words ending in the homophone suffixes '-ice'/ '-isse' was systematic by student teachers. Discrimination in the spelling of pseudo-words was not achieved. Spelling justifications were asked from teachers. These revealed that the knowledge of morphological rules was scarce, in complete or absent. This thesis provides first evidence that older children can use morphological information that is provided, implicitly, through priming. It also shows that achieving consistency in the spelling of morphologically related stems is a long process. Systematic discrimination of homophone suffixes is even harder. However, morphological awareness was generally found to contribute strongly to the spelling, and to predict spelling outcomes, even after stringent controls for grade and IQ. Further research is necessary to examine how children develop morphologically based spellings that cannot be anchored first, in a stable phonological matrix. These results also suggest that instruction with a strong morphological rationale might significantly enhance spelling development.

Page generated in 0.0585 seconds