Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The present study reports two experiments in which a total of 20 participants without prior flight experience practiced the final approach phase in a fixed-base simulator. All participants received self-controlled concurrent feedback during 180 practice trials. Experiment 1 shows that participants learn more quickly under variable practice conditions than under constant practice conditions. This finding is attributed to the education of attention to the more useful informational variables: Variability of practice reduces the usefulness of initially used informational variables, which leads to a quicker change in variable use, and hence to a larger improvement in performance. In the practice phase of Experiment 2 variability was selectively applied to some experimental factors but not to others. Participants tended to converge toward the variables that were useful in the specific conditions that they encountered during practice. This indicates that an explanation for variability of practice effects in terms of the education of attention is a useful alternative to traditional explanations based on the notion of the generalized motor program and to explanations based on the notions of noise and local minima.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0024386DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

education attention
12
variability practice
12
explanation variability
8
practice
8
practice effects
8
final approach
8
approach phase
8
practice conditions
8
informational variables
8
explanations based
8

Similar Publications

Background: Disruptive behavior and emotional problems - especially anxiety - are common in children and frequently co-occur. However, the role of co-occurring emotional problems in disruptive behavior intervention response is unclear. This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of an indicated prevention program in children with disruptive behavior problems with vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

With the persistence of difficult employment, a large number of college students feel anxious and nervous about job hunting. College students with different family economic status have various feelings and performances when faced with employment, possibly due to subjective social class differences. The present study investigated the employment confidence of 611 undergraduates in Chongqing, aimed to ascertain the overall employment confidence of Chinese college students, and tried to analyze how subjective social class works on the employment confidence of college students and its influencing mechanism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Builders or wreckers?

J Natl Med Assoc

September 2025

Department of Family & Preventive Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, 310 Wakara Way Suite 1100, Salt Lake City, UT 84108, USA.

As an academic Family Medicine physician, I focus my attention on fortifying success for all: teaching, advising, caring for, uplifting anyone I encounter. The systemic divisiveness dominating our culture has been pervasive for centuries. Nevertheless, as physicians, we can be a positive force for our society.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background/objective: Adherence rates to supervised gym-based exercise programs traditionally decline over time, highlighting the need to understand participants' perceptions regarding barriers and facilitators to long-term participation. To explore the experiences of people with one or more chronic conditions participating in an ongoing, supervised, gym-based exercise program in regional Australia.

Method: Semistructured interviews were completed with 40 participants and were analyzed thematically using a descriptive qualitative approach.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) rises in the United States, understanding social determinants of cognitive health has become increasingly important. While a robust literature highlights the downward transmission of (dis)advantage across generations, emerging research suggests that this transmission may also flow upwards from offspring to parents. Drawing on data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) parent sample, we examine the association between adult children's educational attainment and parental cognitive functioning at midlife using a propensity score matching approach to account for selection on observed confounders.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF