Search Results - "Komar, Gesa Fee"
-
1
Evidence of a metacognitive illusion in judgments about the effects of music on cognitive performance
Published in Scientific reports (31-10-2023)“…Two experiments serve to examine how people make metacognitive judgments about the effects of task-irrelevant sounds on cognitive performance. According to the…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
2
The animacy effect on free recall is equally large in mixed and pure word lists or pairs
Published in Scientific reports (17-07-2023)“…The cognitive mechanisms underlying the animacy effect on free recall have as yet to be identified. According to the attentional-prioritization account,…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
3
Evidence of a metacognitive illusion in stimulus-specific prospective judgments of distraction by background speech
Published in Scientific reports (15-10-2024)“…Two experiments served to examine how people arrive at stimulus-specific prospective judgments about the distracting effects of speech on cognitive…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
4
Manipulations of Richness of Encoding Do Not Modulate the Animacy Effect on Memory
Published in Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition (01-04-2024)“…The animacy effect refers to the memory advantage of words denoting animate beings over words denoting inanimate objects. Remembering animate beings may serve…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
5
Animacy enhances recollection but not familiarity: Convergent evidence from the remember-know-guess paradigm and the process-dissociation procedure
Published in Memory & cognition (01-01-2023)“…Words representing living beings are better remembered than words representing nonliving objects, a robust finding called the animacy effect. Considering the…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
Animacy enhances recollection but not familiarity: Convergent evidence from the remember-know-guess paradigm and the processdissociation procedure
Published in Memory & cognition (01-01-2023)“…Words representing living beings are better remembered than words representing nonliving objects, a robust finding called the animacy effect. Considering the…”
Get full text
Journal Article