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  2. SQ3R - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQ3R

    The first step, survey, skim, or scan advises that one should resist the temptation to read the book and instead first go through a chapter and note the headings, sub-headings, and other outstanding features, such as figures, tables, marginal information, and summary paragraphs. This survey step typically only takes 3–5 minutes, but it ...

  3. Recall test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recall_test

    Free recall is one of the most commonly used recall tests. In free recall tests participants are asked to study a list of words and then are asked to recall the words in whatever order they choose to recall them in. The words the participants are to recall are typically presented one at a time and for a short duration. The recalling of the ...

  4. Reading span task - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reading_span_task

    With each sentence presented on a card, participants were cued to recall the memorized end-of-sentence words in their original order by a blank card at the end of a series. The number of sentences of a series was incrementally increased until a participant's reading span, or the maximum number of final words correctly recalled, was found.

  5. Memory span - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_span

    In a backward digit span task, the procedure is largely the same, except that subjects being tested are asked to recall the digits in backward order (e.g., if presented with the following string of numbers "1 5 9 2 3," the subject would be asked to recall the digits in reverse order; in the case, the correct response would be "3 2 9 5 1").

  6. Recognition failure of recallable words - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recognition_failure_of...

    Although recognition of previously-studied words through a recognition memory test, in which the words are re-presented for a memory judgment, generally yields a greater response probability than the recall of previously studied words through a recall test, in which the words must be mentally retrieved from memory, Tulving found that this ...

  7. Recall (memory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recall_(memory)

    The ability of humans to store items in memory and recall them is important to the use of language. Imagine recalling the different parts of a sentence, but in the wrong order. The ability to recall in serial order has been found not only in humans, but in a number of non-human primate species and some non-primates. [2]

  8. Testing effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testing_effect

    If we recover the words in the former way, we shall probably know them the next time; if in the latter way, we shall very likely need the book once more." [ 10 ] The first documented empirical studies on the testing effect were published in 1909 by Edwina E. Abbott [ 11 ] [ 12 ] which was followed up by research into the transfer and retrieval ...

  9. Levels of Processing model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levels_of_Processing_model

    When comparing orthographic (capitalization, letter and word shape), phonological (word sound) and semantic (word meaning) encoding cues, the highest levels of recall were found with the meanings of the words, followed by their sounds and finally the written and shape-based cues were found to generate the least ability to stimulate recall. [16]