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Dive into the research topics where Santiago Pelegrina is active.

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Featured researches published by Santiago Pelegrina.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2010

The Specific Role of Inhibition in Reading Comprehension in Good and Poor Comprehenders

Erika Borella; Barbara Carretti; Santiago Pelegrina

Difficulties in inhibitory processes have been shown to characterize the performance of poor comprehenders. However, the inhibitory inefficiency of poor comprehenders is most often assessed by their resistance to proactive interference, that is, the ability to suppress off-goal task information from working memory (WM). In two studies tasks assessing resistance to proactive interference (intrusion errors), response to distracters (Text With Distracters task) and prepotent response inhibition (Stroop and Hayling tests), along with WM measures, were administered to children aged 10 to 11, both good and poor comprehenders. The aim of the study was to specifically determine whether general or specific inhibitory factors affect poor comprehenders’ reading difficulties. Results showed that poor comprehenders, compared to good ones, are impaired in WM tasks and in inhibitory tasks that assess resistance to proactive interference. This suggests that reading comprehension difficulties of poor comprehenders are related to specific inhibitory problems.


Memory & Cognition | 2005

Retrieval-induced forgetting in recall and recognition of thematically related and unrelated sentences

Carlos J. Gómez-Ariza; M. Teresa Lechuga; Santiago Pelegrina; M. Teresa Bajo

In three experiments, we assessed the effects of type of relation and memory test on retrieval-induced forgetting of facts. In Experiments 1 and 2, eight sets of four shared-subject sentences were presented for study. They were constructed so that half were thematically related and half were unrelated. A retrieval practice phase required participants to recall a subset of the studied sentences. In the final test, the participants were prompted to recall all the sentences (character cued in Experiment 1 and character plus stem cued in Experiment 2). The results showed that the retrieval- induced forgetting (RIF) effect was similar for thematically related and unrelated sentences, indicating that the presence of episodic relations among the sentences was sufficient to produce the effect. In Experiment 3, a recognition task was introduced and the RIF effect emerged in accuracy as well as in latency measures. The presence of this effect with item-specific cues is difficult to accommodate for noninhibitory theories of retrieval.


Journal of Adolescence | 2003

Adolescents and their parents’ perceptions about parenting characteristics. Who can better predict the adolescent's academic competence?

Santiago Pelegrina; M.ª Cruz García-Linares; Pedro F. Casanova

This study examined family factors reported by parents and their children in relation to childrens academic competence. Adolescents and their parents (N=323) reported about the same family characteristics: parental acceptance and involvement in the childrens education. Measures related to childrens academic competence were: academic competence rated by the teacher, self-reported grades, perceived academic competence and motivational orientation. The results revealed low interrater agreement in family measures. Moreover, ratings by children about parenting characteristics seem higher than those of their parents in predicting academic-related measures. This was true especially in the case of childrens reports on acceptance. However, in the case of involvement, parents reports contributed towards predicting a higher number of variables.


British Journal of Psychology | 2007

Which factors influence number updating in working memory? The effects of size distance and suppression

Barbara Carretti; Cesare Cornoldi; Santiago Pelegrina

Updating information in working memory is a critical process which makes possible to have available, at every moment, the information most relevant for mind operations. However, the specific mechanisms underlying the updating process have rarely been analysed. This paper examines the importance of two of the mechanisms implicated in a numerical updating task: item comparison and item substitution. The item comparison mechanism was studied by manipulating the size distance between items. The item substitution mechanism was investigated by increasing/decreasing the number of updates within trials. Furthermore, in order to examine the effects of time constraints, presentation rate was manipulated. Over three experiments, the results obtained highlighted that updating performance is mainly influenced by suppression request, even when the presentation rate is self-paced. However, errors depend on the distance between items. The implications of the results for the understanding of updating are discussed.


Experimental Aging Research | 2009

Inhibition and Retrieval of Facts in Young and Older Adults

Carlos J. Gómez-Ariza; Santiago Pelegrina; M. Teresa Lechuga; Antonio Suárez; M. Teresa Bajo

Inhibition is considered to have an important role in memory retrieval. However, many experimental results suggest that its efficiency declines with aging. In this study, the authors tested this hypothesis by using the retrieval-practice task. The retrieval-induced forgetting (RIF) observed with this paradigm is normally explained in terms of inhibition. Young (mean age 21.5 years) and older (mean age 71.6 years) adults studied sets of four shared-subject sentences. A retrieval-practice phase required participants to repeatedly recall a subset of the studied sentences. In the final test, participants were provided item-specific cues and told to recall all the studied sentences. RIF was similar for both age groups, suggesting comparable inhibitory efficiency in young and older adults.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Normative data on the n-back task for children and young adolescents.

Santiago Pelegrina; M. Teresa Lechuga; Juan A. García-Madruga; M. Rosa Elosúa; Pedro Macizo; Manuel Carreiras; Luis J. Fuentes; M. Teresa Bajo

The n-back task is a frequently used measure of working memory (WM) in cognitive neuroscience research contexts, and it has become widely adopted in other areas over the last decade. This study aimed to obtain normative data for the n-back task from a large sample of children and adolescents. To this end, a computerized verbal n-back task with three levels of WM load (1-back, 2-back, and 3-back) was administered to 3722 Spanish school children aged 7–13 years. Results showed an overall age-related increase in performance for the different levels of difficulty. This trend was less pronounced at 1-back than at 2-back when hits were considered. Gender differences were also observed, with girls outperforming boys although taking more time to respond. The theoretical implications of these results are discussed. Normative data stratified by age and gender for the three WM load levels are provided.


Infancia Y Aprendizaje | 2002

Los estilos educativos de los padres y la competencia académica de los adolescentes

Santiago Pelegrina; María Cruz García Linares; Pedro F. Casanova

Resumen El objetivo de este estudio es analizar la relación existente entre los estilos educativos de los padres (democráticos, permisivos, autoritarios e indiferentes) y distintas áreas vinculadas con el rendimiento académico de los hijos. Participaron 372 chicos y chicas de entre 11 y 15 años de edad que evaluaron a sus padres en función del afecto y del control que percibían. Además, cumplimentaron diversas medidas para evaluar su rendimiento académico, su motivación académica, su competencia académica percibida y sus atribuciones sobre las causas del éxito escolar. Los resultados mostraron un patrón claro y consistente en el que los hijos que percibían a sus padres como democráticos o permisivos lograban las puntuaciones más altas en las diferentes áreas analizadas. Los resultados se discuten considerando las dimensiones de afecto y control que subyacen a los distintos estilos educativos de los padres.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2015

Magnitude Representation and Working Memory Updating in Children With Arithmetic and Reading Comprehension Disabilities

Santiago Pelegrina; Agnese Capodieci; Barbara Carretti; Cesare Cornoldi

It has been argued that children with learning disabilities (LD) encounter severe problems in working memory (WM) tasks, especially when they need to update information stored in their WM. It is not clear, however, to what extent this is due to a generally poor updating ability or to a difficulty specific to the domain to be processed. To examine this issue, two groups of children with arithmetic or reading comprehension LD and a group of typically developing children (9 to 10 years old) were assessed using two updating tasks requiring to select the smallest numbers or objects presented. The results showed that children with an arithmetic disability failed in a number updating task, but not in the object updating task. The opposite was true for the group with poor reading comprehension, whose performance was worse in the object than in the number updating task. It may be concluded that the problem of WM updating in children with LD is also due to a poor representation of the material to be updated. In addition, our findings suggest that the mental representation of the size of objects relates to the semantic representation of the objects’ properties and differs from the quantitative representation of numbers.


Memory & Cognition | 2011

The distance effect in numerical memory-updating tasks

Cristina Lendínez; Santiago Pelegrina; Teresa Lechuga

Two experiments examined the role of numerical distance in updating numerical information in working memory. In the first experiment, participants had to memorize a new number only when it was smaller than a previously memorized number. In the second experiment, updating was based on an external signal, which removed the need to perform any numerical comparison. In both experiments, distance between the memorized number and the new one was manipulated. The results showed that smaller distances between the new and the old information led to shorter updating times. This graded facilitation suggests that the process by which information is substituted in the focus of attention involves maintaining the shared features between the new and the old number activated and selecting other new features to be activated. Thus, the updating cost may be related to amount of new features to be activated in the focus of attention.


Journal of Research in Reading | 1999

The Sources of Error in Spanish Writing (Research Note)

Fernando Justicia Justicia; Sylvia Defior; Santiago Pelegrina; Francisco Martos

The main aim of this study was to determine the pattern of errors in Spanish spelling. Specifically, we were interested in discovering if all Spanish words have similar levels of spelling difficulty or whether there are types of words that cause a high percentage of spelling errors. 972 children aged between 8 to 10 years were requested to write a short spontaneous story. Our objective was to analyse and to propose a classification system for the errors made by children in the initial stages of the acquisition of spelling skills. The results indicate (a) that the diverse forms of only 20 Spanish words produce 36 per cent of the spelling errors in Spanish, and (b) that substitution is the most frequent type of error (68 per cent of total errors), which occurs as a consequence of an inadequate knowledge of the rules of phoneme-grapheme correspondence. These findings have relevance for the teaching of writing in Spanish.

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