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The contribution of cognitive resour...
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University of Colorado at Boulder.
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The contribution of cognitive resources to performance on verbal fluency tasks.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The contribution of cognitive resources to performance on verbal fluency tasks./
Author:
Rende, Barbara.
Description:
93 p.
Notes:
Director: Gail Ramsberger.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International60-07B.
Subject:
Health Sciences, Speech Pathology. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9938848
ISBN:
059940101X
The contribution of cognitive resources to performance on verbal fluency tasks.
Rende, Barbara.
The contribution of cognitive resources to performance on verbal fluency tasks.
- 93 p.
Director: Gail Ramsberger.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Colorado at Boulder, 1999.
This study tested the hypothesis that cognitive resources differentially contribute to letter-cued and category-cued verbal fluency tasks. The results from Study 1 support this general premise. Differences in output measures, such as number of words generated and number of switches between subcategories, were different for the letter-cued and category-cued fluency tasks. Participants reported different frequency of strategy use for the two types of verbal fluency tasks. In addition, experimenter-coded verbal fluency responses revealed different response patterns, which presumably reflect different cognitive strategies for the different verbal fluency tasks. The results from Study 1 were used to make predictions about the relative contributions of different cognitive processes to verbal fluency performance.
ISBN: 059940101XSubjects--Topical Terms:
1018105
Health Sciences, Speech Pathology.
The contribution of cognitive resources to performance on verbal fluency tasks.
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The contribution of cognitive resources to performance on verbal fluency tasks.
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93 p.
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Director: Gail Ramsberger.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 60-07, Section: B, page: 3245.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Colorado at Boulder, 1999.
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This study tested the hypothesis that cognitive resources differentially contribute to letter-cued and category-cued verbal fluency tasks. The results from Study 1 support this general premise. Differences in output measures, such as number of words generated and number of switches between subcategories, were different for the letter-cued and category-cued fluency tasks. Participants reported different frequency of strategy use for the two types of verbal fluency tasks. In addition, experimenter-coded verbal fluency responses revealed different response patterns, which presumably reflect different cognitive strategies for the different verbal fluency tasks. The results from Study 1 were used to make predictions about the relative contributions of different cognitive processes to verbal fluency performance.
520
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In Study 2, a dual-task interference paradigm was used to test the predictions that the magnitude of interference from certain tasks would be different for the letter-cued and category-cued verbal fluency tasks. Results indicate that articulatory suppression, a task that utilizes the phonological loop of working memory, interferes more with the letter-cued fluency task than with the category-cued fluency task. Conversely, cube rotation, a task that taps visuo-spatial processes, disrupted the category-cued fluency task more than it did the letter-cued fluency task. An executive monitoring task, the 2-back task, and an executive switching task had equally disruptive effects on both the letter-cued and category-cued fluency tasks. These results have implications for diagnosing and treating persons with impaired verbal fluency performance secondary to brain injury.
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School code: 0051.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9938848
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