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Dive into the research topics where Pei Chun Shih is active.

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Featured researches published by Pei Chun Shih.


Memory & Cognition | 2006

Complex span tasks, simple span tasks, and cognitive abilities: A reanalysis of key studies

Roberto Colom; Irene Rebollo; Francisco J. Abad; Pei Chun Shih

There is great interest in the relationships between memory span tasks and cognitive abilities. However, the causes underlying their correlation remain unknown. In the present article, five key data sets were reanalyzed according to two criteria: They must consider complex span tasks (so-called working memory [WM] tasks) and simple span tasks (so-called short-term memory [STM] tasks), and they must comprise cognitive ability measures. The obtained results offer several points of interest. First, memory span tasks should be conceived from a hierarchical perspective: They comprise both general and specific components. Second, the general component explains about four times the variance explained by the specific components. Third, STM and WM measures are closely related. Fourth, STM and WM measures share the same common variance with cognitive abilities. Finally, the strong relationship usually found between memory span tasks and cognitive abilities could be tentatively interpreted by the component shared by STM and WM—namely, the capacity for temporarily preserving a reliable memory representation of any given information.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2006

The effect of previous experience with information and communication technologies on performance in a Web-based learning program

Pei Chun Shih; Dolores Muñoz; Flor Sánchez

The purpose of the present study was to analyze the influence of previous experience with information and communication technology (ICT) tools on performance in a Web-based course. Online activity was logged. Specifically, total activities carried out and five online activity measures were computed. One hundred and twenty university undergraduates participated in a Web-based course designed to train personnel trainers to apply ICT in training processes. Before starting the study, participants filled out a questionnaire designed to assess their frequency using ICT tools. At the end of the study, participants were asked to complete a questionnaire in order to collect information about their learning experience and their assessment of the virtual environment. Results suggest that previous experience significantly influences how people organize their online activities, but not the quantity of work carried out. Participants with more experience in the use of Internet tools, organize their work in the virtual classroom using less time and visiting fewer pages in each session. Previous experience did not influence the assessment of the virtual classroom as a training tool, since participants with both high and low previous experience gave extremely positive feedback on their Web-based learning experience.


Memory | 2006

The real relationship between short-term memory and working memory

Roberto Colom; Pei Chun Shih; Carmen Flores-Mendoza; Mª Ángeles Quiroga

Storage-oriented memory span tasks with no explicit concurrent processing are usually referred as short-term memory (STM) tasks, whereas tasks involving storage plus concurrent processing requirements are designated as working memory (WM) tasks. The present study explores a question that remains unsolved: Do STM and WM tasks clearly tap distinguishable theoretical constructs? For that purpose, a large sample of 403 participants was tested through 12 diverse memory span tasks. Half of those tasks are widely accepted as measures of STM, whereas the other half measure WM. The results show that STM and WM share largely overlapping underlying capacity limitations, suggesting that all memory span tasks tap essentially the same construct. Some implications are discussed.


European Journal of Psychological Assessment | 2003

The Assessment of Spatial Ability with a Single Computerized Test

Roberto Colom; Mª José Contreras; Pei Chun Shih; José Santacreu

Summary: Spatial cognitive ability has to do with how individuals deal with spatial information. Spatial ability is routinely assessed to predict performance in a variety of job positions, air traffic control being an example. Spatial tests are good predictors of performance in those occupations. One of the most valuable pieces of knowledge for psychological assessment in personnel selection is that concerning efficient ways to measure a given psychological trait, meaning that the measure shows high validity and low application costs. This article reports two studies showing the high efficiency of a new measure of spatial ability: SODT-R, a computer-administered test of dynamic spatial performance in which the person is required to simultaneously orient two moving points to a given destination that change from trial to trial. In the first study, 602 applicants for an air traffic control training course completed a battery of nine cognitive tests. In the second study, 105 university undergraduates complete...


Journal of General Psychology | 2009

Performance as a Function of Ability, Resources Invested, and Strategy Used

Juan Botella; Daniel Peña; María José Contreras; Pei Chun Shih; José Santacreu

Computerized tasks allow a more fine-grained analysis of the strategy deployed in a task designed to map a specific ability than the usual assessment on the basis of only the level of performance. Manipulations expected to impair performance sometimes do not have that effect, probably because the level of performance alone can confound the assessment of the ability level if researchers ignore the strategy used. In a study with 1,872 participants, the authors applied the Spatial Orientation Dynamic Test-Revised (J. Santacreu, 1999) in single and dual task settings, identifying 3 different strategies. Strategy shifts were associated with the level of performance, as more apt individuals were more likely to shift to better strategies. Ignoring the strategies yields counterintuitive results that cannot be explained by simple, direct relations among the constructs involved.


Intelligence | 2008

Working Memory and Intelligence Are Highly Related Constructs, but Why?.

Roberto Colom; Francisco J. Abad; Mª Ángeles Quiroga; Pei Chun Shih; Carmen Flores-Mendoza


Intelligence | 2005

Memory span and general intelligence: A latent-variable approach

Roberto Colom; Francisco J. Abad; Irene Rebollo; Pei Chun Shih


Intelligence | 2009

Gray Matter Correlates of Fluid, Crystallized, and Spatial Intelligence: Testing the P-FIT Model.

Roberto Colom; Richard J. Haier; Kevin Head; Juan Álvarez-Linera; María Ángeles Quiroga; Pei Chun Shih; Rex E. Jung


Personality and Individual Differences | 2007

Fluid intelligence, memory span, and temperament difficulties predict academic performance of young adolescents

Roberto Colom; Sergio Escorial; Pei Chun Shih; Jesús Privado


Intelligence | 2011

Can fluid intelligence be reduced to ‘simple’ short-term storage?

Kenia Martínez; Miguel Burgaleta; Francisco J. Román; Sergio Escorial; Pei Chun Shih; Mª Ángeles Quiroga; Roberto Colom

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Roberto Colom

Autonomous University of Madrid

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José Santacreu

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Mª Ángeles Quiroga

Complutense University of Madrid

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Kenia Martínez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Alejandra Montoro

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Francisco J. Abad

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Francisco J. Román

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Jesús Privado

Complutense University of Madrid

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José Santacreu Mas

Autonomous University of Madrid

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