Search

Your search keyword '"Gaskell MG"' showing total 78 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Gaskell MG" Remove constraint Author: "Gaskell MG"
78 results on '"Gaskell MG"'

Search Results

1. Nap effects on preschool children's learning of letter-sound mappings

2. Author Correction: A consensus-based transparency checklist.

3. A consensus-based transparency checklist

4. Sleep-Dependent Memory Consolidation and Incremental Sentence Comprehension: Computational Dependencies during Language Learning as Revealed by Neuronal Oscillations

5. Involvement of episodic memory in language comprehension: Naturalistic comprehension pushes unrelated words closer in semantic space for at least 12 h.

6. EPS mid-career prize: An integrated framework for the learning, recognition and interpretation of words.

7. Delineating memory reactivation in sleep with verbal and non-verbal retrieval cues.

8. An Enduring Role for Hippocampal Pattern Completion in Addition to an Emergent Nonhippocampal Contribution to Holistic Episodic Retrieval after a 24 h Delay.

9. A registered report testing the effect of sleep on Deese-Roediger-McDermott false memory: greater lure and veridical recall but fewer intrusions after sleep.

10. Episodic memory and sleep are involved in the maintenance of context-specific lexical information.

11. Stronger Associations Between Sleep and Mental Health in Adults with Autism: A UK Biobank Study.

12. Sleep loss disrupts the neural signature of successful learning.

13. Do naps benefit novel word learning? Developmental differences and white matter correlates.

14. Targeted memory reactivation during sleep can induce forgetting of overlapping memories.

15. Schematic information influences memory and generalisation behaviour for schema-relevant and -irrelevant information.

16. Word-meaning priming extends beyond homonyms.

17. Nap effects on preschool children's learning of letter-sound mappings.

18. UK children's sleep and anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic.

19. Neural Responses to Novel and Existing Words in Children with Autism Spectrum and Developmental Language Disorder.

20. Does the maturation of early sleep patterns predict language ability at school entry? A Born in Bradford study.

21. The role of prior lexical knowledge in children's and adults' incidental word learning from illustrated stories.

22. Sleep-dependent consolidation in children with comprehension and vocabulary weaknesses: it'll be alright on the night?

23. Atypicalities in sleep and semantic consolidation in autism.

24. Investigating the formation and consolidation of incidentally learned trust.

25. Growing up with interfering neighbours: the influence of time of learning and vocabulary knowledge on written word learning in children.

26. United we fall: All-or-none forgetting of complex episodic events.

27. Author Correction: A consensus-based transparency checklist.

28. A consensus-based transparency checklist.

29. Sleep Promotes Phonological Learning in Children Across Language and Autism Spectra.

30. The role of complementary learning systems in learning and consolidation in a quasi-regular domain.

31. Reasons to doubt the generalizability, reliability, and diagnosticity of fast mapping (FM) for rapid lexical integration.

32. Offline consolidation supersedes prior knowledge benefits in children's (but not adults') word learning.

33. Learning to live with interfering neighbours: the influence of time of learning and level of encoding on word learning.

34. The nature of delayed dream incorporation ('dream-lag effect'): Personally significant events persist, but not major daily activities or concerns.

35. Contextual priming of word meanings is stabilized over sleep.

36. Listeners and readers generalize their experience with word meanings across modalities.

37. Consolidation of vocabulary is associated with sleep in typically developing children, but not in children with dyslexia.

38. Incorporation of recent waking-life experiences in dreams correlates with frontal theta activity in REM sleep.

39. No effect of targeted memory reactivation during slow-wave sleep on emotional recognition memory.

40. Sleep preserves original and distorted memory traces.

41. A role for consolidation in cross-modal category learning.

42. Accent modulates access to word meaning: Evidence for a speaker-model account of spoken word recognition.

43. Mechanisms of Memory Retrieval in Slow-Wave Sleep.

44. Bedding down new words: Sleep promotes the emergence of lexical competition in visual word recognition.

45. Consolidation of vocabulary during sleep: The rich get richer?

46. Eye-tracking the time-course of novel word learning and lexical competition in adults and children.

47. The Benefits of Targeted Memory Reactivation for Consolidation in Sleep are Contingent on Memory Accuracy and Direct Cue-Memory Associations.

48. Does Sleep Improve Your Grammar? Preferential Consolidation of Arbitrary Components of New Linguistic Knowledge.

50. The dream-lag effect: Selective processing of personally significant events during Rapid Eye Movement sleep, but not during Slow Wave Sleep.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources