Remembering the future: individual differences in metacognitive representation predict prospective memory performance on time-baseed [sic] and event-based tasks in early childhood
Prospective memory is remembering to perform an action in the future, such as attending a meeting (a time-based task) or picking up milk at the gas station (an eventbased task), and is crucial to achieving goal-directed activities in everyday life. Children who fail to develop prospective memory abi...
Other Authors: | Causey, Kayla B. |
---|---|
Format: | Others |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Florida Atlantic University
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://purl.flvc.org/FAU/2974431 |
Similar Items
-
Psychosocial factors and academic performance among first-year financial aid students : testing adjustment as a mediator variable
by: Petersen, Il-haam
Published: (2015) -
Disinhibition and terrorism
by: Cliff, Amanda V.
Published: (2008) -
Biopsychosocial implications of heroin addiction
by: Cheng, Lai-fung, Gordon, et al.
Published: (2014) -
Industrial Psychological Testing: A Review of the Controversy and a Comparison of Some Effective Testing Conditions with Some Stated Uses
by: Jones, William Lewis
Published: (1964) -
The mediating sex-specific effect of psychological distress on the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and current smoking among adults
by: Strine Tara W, et al.
Published: (2012-07-01)