Publications by authors named "Guy L Lacroix"

Subjective confidence reports are used in numerous research paradigms to examine the extent to which participants are aware of their performance in a task. By examining the discrepancy between objective performance and subjective confidence ratings, inferences can be made about the conditions in which participants have greater explicit knowledge of the representations and processes used to complete a task. In the current study, we examined the effects of prior knowledge on subjective assessments of performance using a categorisation task wherein lists of features that defined exemplars shared latent feature associations on the basis of prior knowledge or had no prior associations.

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Article Synopsis
  • - S. W. Allen and L. R. Brooks (1991) demonstrated that people's memory of specific examples (exemplar memory) can influence how they categorize new information, even if they have a classification rule to follow.
  • - G. Regehr and L. R. Brooks (1993) suggested that for this influence to happen, the stimuli (the things being categorized) need to be distinguishable from one another.
  • - The current study evaluates when exemplar effects appear in categorization with experiments showing that attention to certain interchangeable attributes is necessary for an impact, but these effects can also occur even without attention in more incidental learning conditions.
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The goal of this study was to evaluate the possibility that dyslexic individuals require more working memory resources than normal readers to shift attention from stimulus to stimulus. To test this hypothesis, normal and dyslexic adolescents participated in a Rapid Serial Visual Presentation experiment (Raymond, Shapiro, & Arnell, 1992). Surprisingly, the result showed that the participants with dyslexia produced a shallower attentional blink than normal controls.

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