Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Spacing_effect> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 27 of
27
with 100 items per page.
- Spacing_effect abstract "In the field of psychology, the spacing effect is the phenomenon whereby animals (including humans) more easily remember or learn items when they are studied a few times spaced over a long time span ("spaced presentation") rather than repeatedly studied in a short span of time ("massed presentation"). Practically, this effect suggests that "cramming" (intense, last-minute studying) the night before an exam is not likely to be as effective as studying at intervals in a longer time frame. Important to note, however, is that the benefit of spaced presentations does not appear at short retention intervals, in which massed presentations tend to lead to better memory performance.The phenomenon was first identified by Hermann Ebbinghaus, and his detailed study of it was published in the 1885 book Über das Gedächtnis. Untersuchungen zur experimentellen Psychologie (Memory: A Contribution to Experimental Psychology). This robust finding has been supported by studies of many explicit memory tasks such as free recall, recognition, cued-recall, and frequency estimation (for reviews see Crowder 1976; Greene, 1989).Researchers have offered several possible explanations of the spacing effect, and much research has been conducted that supports its impact on recall. In spite of these findings, the robustness of this phenomenon and its resistance to experimental manipulation have made empirical testing of its parameters difficult.".
- Spacing_effect wikiPageExternalLink books?id=kfA0AAAAMAAJ&oe=UTF-8.
- Spacing_effect wikiPageExternalLink index.htm.
- Spacing_effect wikiPageExternalLink ff_wozniak.
- Spacing_effect wikiPageID "903495".
- Spacing_effect wikiPageRevisionID "598817069".
- Spacing_effect hasPhotoCollection Spacing_effect.
- Spacing_effect subject Category:Cognitive_biases.
- Spacing_effect subject Category:Educational_psychology.
- Spacing_effect type Abstraction100002137.
- Spacing_effect type Attitude106193203.
- Spacing_effect type Bias106201908.
- Spacing_effect type Cognition100023271.
- Spacing_effect type CognitiveBiases.
- Spacing_effect type Inclination106196584.
- Spacing_effect type Partiality106201136.
- Spacing_effect type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Spacing_effect comment "In the field of psychology, the spacing effect is the phenomenon whereby animals (including humans) more easily remember or learn items when they are studied a few times spaced over a long time span ("spaced presentation") rather than repeatedly studied in a short span of time ("massed presentation"). Practically, this effect suggests that "cramming" (intense, last-minute studying) the night before an exam is not likely to be as effective as studying at intervals in a longer time frame.".
- Spacing_effect label "Efecto de memoria espaciada".
- Spacing_effect label "Spacing effect".
- Spacing_effect sameAs Efecto_de_memoria_espaciada.
- Spacing_effect sameAs m.03nfzz.
- Spacing_effect sameAs Q1095859.
- Spacing_effect sameAs Q1095859.
- Spacing_effect sameAs Spacing_effect.
- Spacing_effect wasDerivedFrom Spacing_effect?oldid=598817069.
- Spacing_effect isPrimaryTopicOf Spacing_effect.