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  • 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.
11

Effects of Testing and Enactment on Memory

Kubik, Veit January 2014 (has links)
Learning occurs not only when we encode information but also when we test our memory for this information at a later time. In three empirical studies, I investigated the individual and combined effects of interleaved testing (via repeated rounds of study and test practice) and encoding (via motor enactment) during learning on later cued-recall performance for action phrases. Such materials (e.g., “water the flowers”) contain a verb and a noun and approximate everyday memory that typically revolves around past and future actions. Study I demonstrated that both interleaved testing (vs. study only) and enactment (vs. verbal encoding) individually reduced the forgetting rate over a period of 1 week, but these effects were nonadditive. That is, the direct testing effect on the forgetting rate occurred for verbal, but not for enactive encoding; enactment reduced the forgetting rate for the study-only condition, but not for the study–test condition. A possible explanation of these findings is that both study techniques sufficiently elicit verb–noun relational processing that cannot be increased further by combining them. In Studies II and III, I replicated these testing-effect results and investigated whether they varied as a function of recall type (i.e., noun-cued recall of verbs and verb-cued recall of nouns). For verbal encoding (Study II), the direct testing effect was of similar size for both noun- and verb-cued recall. For enactive encoding, the direct testing effect was lacking irrespective of recall type. In addition, interleaved tests enhanced subsequent re-encoding of action phrases, leading to an accelerated learning. This indirect testing effect was increased for the noun-cued recall of verbs—for both verbal and enactive encoding. A possible explanation is that because nouns are semantically more stable, in that the meaning of nouns changes less over time and across different contexts, they are more recognizable. Hence, associated information (e.g., about the recall status) may be more available to the learner during restudy that, in turn, can initiate more effective re-encoding. The two different testing benefits (i.e., direct and indirect) may, partly, engage different mechanisms, as they were influenced differentially by the manipulations of encoding type and recall type. The findings presented in the thesis provide new knowledge regarding the combined effects of strategies and materials that influence memory. / <p>At the time of the doctoral defense, the following papers were unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 1. Epub ahead of print. Paper 2: Manuscript. Paper 3: Manuscript.</p>
12

Effect of Multiple-choice Testing on Memory Retention – Cue-target Symmetry

Cheng, Cho Kin 18 July 2014 (has links)
This thesis investigated the testing effect, which is the tendency of testing to enhance learning and memory retention. Specifically, the thesis examines the extent to which test-induced retention benefits extend to the questions as well as the answers; are these benefits symmetrical? The results in the laboratory experiment (Experiment 1) demonstrated that the symmetry in retention benefits is highly dependent on the accuracy in the initial test. For the items students answered correctly in the initial test, the retention benefit was found to be symmetrical across the questions and answers supporting the retrieval hypothesis of the testing effect. However, for initially incorrect items, the retention performance was substantially better for the questions than the answers suggesting an asymmetrical effect from testing, a result that is also consistent with the retrieval hypothesis. These results were replicated using educationally-relevant materials with a delay up to five and a half months in two hybrid studies combining actual classroom experiences with controlled assessments in the laboratory (Experiment 2A & 2B). A series of follow-up studies were conducted to examine the difference in retention performance of the questions and the answers for the initial incorrect items. Particularly, the experiments focused on investigating various factors that might contribute to or eliminate the difference in retention performance, including prior study (Experiment 3), verification feedback (Experiment 4A & 4B) and answer feedback (Experiment 5). The thesis also touched upon various issues related to the temporal dimension of the testing effect. The previous notion that testing slows down forgetting rate is not supported by the data. Instead, testing seems to provide a short-term insulation against immediate forgetting, but then memory for the tested materials decays in the same way as the non-tested materials.
13

The Effect of Embedded Questions in Programming Education Videos

January 2016 (has links)
abstract: One of the primary objective in a computer science related course is for students to be able to write programs implementing the concepts covered in that course. In educational psychology, however, learning gains are more commonly measured using recall or problem solving questions. While these types of questions are relevant to computer science exams, they do not necessarily reflect a student’s ability to apply concepts by writing an original program to solve a novel problem. This thesis investigates the effectiveness of including questions within instructional multimedia content to improve student performance on a related programming assignment. Similar techniques have proven effective in educational psychology research using other measures. The objective of this thesis is to apply educational techniques used in other domains to an experiment with real world measures of students in a computer science course. The findings of this paper demonstrate that the techniques used were promising in improving student performance on a programming assignment. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Computer Science 2016
14

Neurocognitive processes during repeated study and repeated testing : An fMRI experiment on the testing effect

Lindh, Daniel January 2013 (has links)
Testing facilitates memory retention more than studying. The current experiment aimed to investigate neural memory-related processes during repeated testing and studying, thereby contributing to more elaborate theories. 5 participants (aged 19-31) practiced word-pair associates during fMRI through repeated studying (40 pairs) and testing (40 pairs). One week later they returned for a test and the outcome was used to calculate subsequent memory differences during fMRI. Findings included higher subsequent memory difference in left parietal lobe, precuneus and superior frontal gyrus for the test condition, implying more elaborate semantic processing. Also, an interaction effect was found in anterior cingulate cortex, possibly indicating an early beneficial recruitment of memory enhancing functions in the test condition. / Testning förbättrar minnesinlagring mer än studium. Det aktuella experimentet syftade till att undersöka neurala minnesrelaterade processer under upprepad testning och studium, och därmed bidra till mer konkreta teorier. 5 deltagare (i åldern 19-31) tränade ordpar (Swahili-Svenska) i en fMRI-scanner, antingen genom upprepat studium (40 par) eller upprepad testning (40 par). En vecka senare återvände de för ett slutgiltigt test på alla ordpar. Resultatet användes för att beräkna skillnader mellan lyckade och ej lyckade omgångar i fMRI-scannern. Högre skillnader i vänstra inferiora parietalloben, precuneus och superiora frontalgyrus hittades för testning jämfört med studium, vilket kan spegla en djupare semantisk bearbetning. En interaktionseffekt hittades i anteriora cingulate cortex, vilket möjligen indikerar en tidig rekrytering av fördelaktiga minnesfunktioner i test-betingelsen.
15

The Primary and Convergent Retrieval Model of Memory

Hopper, William J 13 July 2016 (has links)
Memory models typically assume that recall is a two-stage process with learning affecting both processes to the same degree. This equal learning assumption is difficult to reconcile with studies of the 'testing effect', which reveal different forgetting rates following learning from test practice versus learning from restudy. Here we present a new memory model, termed Primary and Convergent Retrieval (PCR) that assumes successful recall leads to a selective enhancement for the second stage of recall (Convergent Retrieval). We applied this model to existing testing effect data. In two new experiments, we confirmed novel predictions of the PCR model for transfer between retrieval cues and for recall latencies. This is the first formally specified model of the testing effect and it has broad implications for the nature of learning and retrieval.
16

Test-Enhanced Learning in Post-Secondary Biology Courses: The Effect of Cues and Incentives on High-Level Learning

St. Clair, Bryn Ellen 02 April 2021 (has links)
Cognitive scientists and psychology researchers have given growing attention to evidence of the testing effect, that is, the improvement of students' recall through memory-retrieval practice in the form of quizzes and exams. While laboratory experiments consistently show dramatic positive effects on learning through the testing effect, discipline-specific education researchers have sought to generalize these findings in real, instead of simulated classrooms. The objective of this dissertation was threefold: (1) To survey the current literature on the testing-effect as it applies to learning biology at the post-secondary level. In this review, I consider how further research on the testing effect may be useful for instructors' decisions regarding its use. (2) To describe findings from a qua¬si-experimental design in a post-secondary biology class with low and high point incentives and measured student learning. Although exposure to exams predicted better learning, incentive level did not moderate this effect, an outcome that contradicted recent laboratory findings that higher incentives decreased student recall. (3) To describe findings from a study that compared student learning in conditions where cued exams were in place versus conditions in which they were absent. Student learning improved in the former condition relative to the latter. I discuss the implications of the results in all of these studies for further research and application.
17

Pictures and a Thousand Words : Learning Psychology through Visual Illustrations and Testing

Jägerskog, Ann-Sofie January 2015 (has links)
For teachers and students to be able to make informed decisions about how to best improve learning, it is important to compare learning strategies that are known to be effective. Both multimedia learning, based on the notion that individuals learn better from words and pictures presented together than from words alone, and retrieval practice, based on the idea that retrieving knowledge from the memory is an active process that has a beneficial impact on learning, have been found robust learning strategies in earlier research. However, the two strategies remain to be investigated in combination. The combination of the two seemingly robust strategies was investigated in Study I and results showed a modest effect of retrieval practice in terms of decreased forgetting and a strong effect of multimedia learning. Retrieval practice did not improve memory performance beyond the beneficial effect of using a visual illustration. Study II investigated the beneficial effects of the use of visual illustrations in more detail in terms of preferred learning style (visual, verbal or mixed), a notion that has reached wide popular ac- ceptance within the educational field. Support was not found for the learning styles hypothesis. Rather, results showed that the positive effects of learning with the aid of a visual illustration holds independently of preferred learning style, which renders strong support for multimedia learning in terms of its generalizability. Most interestingly, students with mixed or visual learning styles performed generally better on the learning test than students with a verbal learning style, which may imply that it is worthwhile to help students develop a preference for visual or multimodal aspects of information pro- cessing in order to further improve learning. The findings presented in this thesis provide new knowledge regarding the combination of learning strate- gies and contribute with important insights into the relation between learning style and the use of visual illustrations in psychology teaching. The findings also pose challenges for students and teachers, as well as people designing learning materials, concerning how to approach the use of visual illustrations and retrieval practice in teaching and learning.
18

Knowledge Updating of the Testing Effect: Enhancing Student Appreciation of the Testing Effect Through Task Experience

McLeod, Mason A. 12 December 2018 (has links)
No description available.
19

Do repeated judgments of learning lead to improved memory?

Larsson Sundqvist, Max January 2011 (has links)
Judgments of Learning (JOL) that are made after a delay, instead of immediately after study, are more accurate in terms of predicting later recall (the delayed JOL effect). The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy (SFP) theory explains the delayed JOL effect as the result of a testing effect. In the current study we tested the prediction that performing delayed JOLs leads to a memory improvement. During learning, 79 participants studied Swahili-Swedish word pairs, immediately followed by a cued recall test, and then made either one single or three repeated, spaced JOLs. A final cued recall test was given after either 5 minutes or 1 week. Making repeated JOLs did not increase memory performance compared to the single JOL condition, hence lending no support to the SFP theory. However, making repeated JOLs did improve their relative accuracy, which suggests that the delayed JOL effect mainly concerns memory monitoring and not performance.
20

Direkt effekt av testning för motoriskt utförda handlingsfraser / Direct testing effect for self-performed action events

Kihlstedt, Max, Saletovic, Jasmina January 2016 (has links)
Denna studie undersöker direkt effekt av testning för motoriskt utförda handlingsfraser eftertvå veckor. Studien omfattar trettioen försökspersoner (N=31), 18 kvinnor och 13 män.Försökspersonerna är studenter från Örebro Universitetet. För att utföra experimentetanvänds dataprogrammet E-Prime. Försökspersonerna får lära sig 48 olika handlingsfraser,till exempel ”lyft glaset”, samtidigt som de utför fraserna motoriskt. Resultatet visar att detfanns en direkt testeffekt för motoriskt utförda handlingsfraser efter två veckor. / This study investigates direkt testing effect for self-performed actions after two weeks. Studyincludes 31 participants (N=31) 18 women and 13 men. Participants are students at ÖrebroUniversity. The computer program E-prime is used to carry out the experiment. Participantslearns 48 action phrases . One example of an action phrase is ”lift the glass” and this actionevent is self- performed at the same time. Result shows that there is an direkt testing effect onself-performed action events after two weeks.

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