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Dive into the research topics where Sharon A. Mutter is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharon A. Mutter.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1992

Serial pattern learning by event observation

James H. Howard; Sharon A. Mutter; Darlene V. Howard

Serial pattern learning was investigated in a variation of the task introduced by Nissen and Bullemer (1987). We presented an asterisk at 1 of 4 spatial locations on each trial, and Ss either responded with a keypress or observed the event. The first 4 blocks contained 10 repetitions of a 10- or 16-element pattern, and the 5th block contained a random sequence. The difference in response time on the 5th random block and the previous patterned block served as an indirect measure of pattern learning. A direct measure was obtained in a final test block in which Ss predicted the next asterisk position. Equivalent learning occurred for responding and observing with indirect measures, but observation was superior with direct measures. These findings indicate that knowledge of serial order can develop through simple perceptual experience, and this is more available to deliberate recall than is knowledge acquired while responding.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1984

Intact Retention in Acute Alcohol Amnesia

Shahin Hashtroudi; Elizabeth S. Parker; Lynn E. DeLisi; Richard Jed Wyatt; Sharon A. Mutter

Research on alcohol amnesia has focused on memory processes that are disrupted during intoxication. The present experiment examined the possibility that certain memory processes might be resistant to the amnesic effects of alcohol. Intoxicated and sober subjects studied a list of 29 words. They were then given one of three different retention tests: free recall, identification of degraded words based on the procedure used by Warrington and Weiskrantz (1970), and yes/no recognition. As expected, free recall was significantly impaired by alcohol intoxication. In contrast, in the identification test, intoxicated subjects benefited to the same degree as sober subjects from prior exposure to the items. The two groups did not differ in immediate recognition memory. The results of the free-recall and identification tasks are similar to findings with chronic amnesic patients and suggest that perceptual fluency is not affected by alcohol, whereas elaborative processes supporting recall are particularly sensitive to disruption during intoxication. The failure to find recognition impairment at the level of intoxication used in this study distinguishes temporary alcohol amnesia from chronic amnesia.


Experimental Aging Research | 1996

Age Differences in the Accuracy of Confidence Judgments

Rebecca M. Pliske; Sharon A. Mutter

Age differences in accuracy were investigated by having older (M = 68.6 years) and younger (M = 21.5 years) adults make confidence judgments about the correctness of their responses to two sets of general knowledge items. For one set, prior to making their confidence judgments, subjects made mental strategy judgements indicating how they had selected their answers (i.e., they guessed, used intuition, made an inference, or immediately recognized the response as correct). Results indicate that older subjects were more accurate than younger subjects in predicting the correctness of their responses; however, making mental strategy judgments did not result in increased accuracy for either age group. Additional analyses explored the relationship between accuracy and other individual difference variables. The results of this investigation are consistent with recent theories of postformal cognitive development that suggest older adults have greater insight into the limitations of their knowledge.


Memory & Cognition | 2005

The Effects of Age and Task Context on Stroop Task Performance

Sharon A. Mutter; Jenniffer C. Naylor; Emily R. Patterson

In this study, we investigated the impact of age and task context on Stroop task performance, using error scores, response latencies, and process dissociation estimates (e.g., Lindsay & Jacoby, 1994). Across three experiments, the findings showed that although older adults were able to evaluate Stroop task demands and modify their representations of task context in response to this knowledge, they were less able to maintain and update these representations on a trial-by-trial basis in tasks with high stimulus uncertainty or ambiguity. Moreover, although there was no age-related decline in the ability to modulate print color information, older adults were consistently less able to control the activation of conflicting word information. Together, these findings suggest that whereas age differences in the Stroop task may be magnified under conditions that promote transient failures to maintain task context, the primary source of these differences seems to be a more enduring decline in the efficiency of processes that are responsible for suppressing the activation of irrelevant lexical information.


human factors in computing systems | 1993

The growth of software skill: a longitudinal look at learning & performance

Erik Nilsen; Hee Sen Jong; Judith S. Olson; Kevin Biolsi; Henry H. Rueter; Sharon A. Mutter

This research follows a group of users over time (16 months) as they progress from novice towards expert in their use of Lotus 1-2-3. Quantitative and qualitative measures of performance are compared with expert users having over three years of experience. The results indicate that the motor aspects of performance are relatively stable over time, while improvement in the cognitive components of the skill are dependent on aspects of the menu structure and how many things must be retrieved from memory, among other things. These results imply extensions to the Keystroke Level Model of skilled performance as well as suggest ways to design the user interfaces so as to speed the acquisition of expertise.


Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2006

Aging, working memory, and discrimination learning

Sharon A. Mutter; Steven J. Haggbloom; Leslie F. Plumlee; Amy R. Schirmer

Older adults easily learn probabilistic relationships between cues and outcomes when the predictive event is the occurrence of a cue, but have greater difficulty when the predictive event is the nonoccurrence of a cue (Mutter & Pliske, 1996; Mutter & Plumlee, 2004; Mutter & Williams, 2004). This study explored whether this age-related deficit occurs in a simpler learning context and whether it might be related to working memory (WM) decline. We gave younger and older adults simultaneous discrimination tasks that allowed us to compare their ability to learn deterministic relationships when either the occurrence (feature positive; FP) or the nonoccurrence (feature negative; FN) of a distinctive feature predicted reinforcement. We also included a group of younger adults who performed the discrimination tasks under a concurrent WM load. Both age and WM load had a detrimental effect on initial FP and FN discrimination; however, these effects persisted only in FN discrimination after additional learning experience. Learning predictive relationships requires inductive reasoning processes that apparently do not operate as efficiently in individuals with reduced WM capacity. The impact of WM decline may ultimately be greater for negative cue–outcome relationships because learning these relationships requires more difficult inductive reasoning processes, which place greater demands on WM.


Memory & Cognition | 2007

The role of age and prior beliefs in contingency judgment

Sharon A. Mutter; Laura M. Strain; Leslie F. Plumlee

This experiment investigated how prior beliefs affect young and older adults’ ability to detect differences in objective contingency. Participants received new evidence that the objective contingency between two events was positive, negative, or zero when they believed that there was a positive or negative relationship between events, when they believed that the events were unrelated, and when they had no knowledge of the relationship between the events. They were then asked to estimate the objective contingency and recall the contingency evidence. Beliefs that events were or could be related improved young adults’ contingency discrimination. Moreover, these beliefs did not produce biases in young adults’ memory for the contingency evidence, but rather affected how they weighted this evidence at judgment. In contrast, these same beliefs did not improve older adults’ contingency discrimination, but did produce biases in their memory for the evidence that were similar to those seen in their judgment. These findings are discussed in terms of age-related changes in working memory executive processes that impair older adults’ ability to fully evaluate both belief-confirming and disconfirming contingency evidence and update their beliefs with this information.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1994

Serial pattern learning after head injury

Sharon A. Mutter; James H. Howard; Darlene V. Howard

Nonverbal serial pattern learning in patients with traumatic brain injury was examined using a serial reaction time task developed by Nissen and Bullemer (1987). During four blocks of pattern acquisition trials, subjects responded to asterisks appearing in repetitions of a 10-element spatial sequence. An indirect measure of pattern learning was obtained by comparing response times in the fourth pattern acquisition block with response times in a fifth block where asterisks occurred in random sequence. A direct measure of pattern memory was provided by accuracy scores in a final pattern generation block in which subjects predicted the spatial sequence of asterisks. Prior research with this task has shown that individuals from several special populations--including the normal elderly, Korsakoffs syndrome patients, and Alzheimers patients--show intact performance on the indirect measure of pattern learning, but are impaired on the direct measure. In contrast to these earlier findings, the results of this study showed that mild to moderately severe traumatic brain injury does not cause a marked disruption in the ability to learn and remember serial pattern information. There was evidence that the amount of practice required to learn the serial pattern increases after moderately severe head injury; however, the ability to use pattern memory to enhance prediction accuracy appears to be normal.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 2012

Aging and Retrospective Revaluation of Causal Learning

Sharon A. Mutter; Anthony R. Atchley; Leslie M. Plumlee

In a 2-stage causal learning task, young and older participants first learned which foods presented in compound were followed by an allergic reaction (e.g., STEAK-BEANS→ REACTION) and then the causal efficacy of 1 food from these compounds was revalued (e.g., BEANS→ NO REACTION). In Experiment 1, unrelated food pairs were used, and although there were no age differences in compound- or single-cue-outcome learning, older adults did not retrospectively revalue the causal efficacy of the absent target cues (e.g., STEAK). However, they had weaker within-compound associations for the unrelated foods, and this may have prevented them from retrieving the representations of these cues. In Experiment 2, older adults still showed no retrospective revaluation of absent cues even though compound food cues with pre-existing associations were used (e.g., STEAK-POTATO), and they received additional learning trials. Finally, in Experiment 3, older adults revalued the causal efficacy of the target cues when small, unobtrusive icons of these cues were present during single-cue revaluation. These findings suggest that age-related deficits in causal learning for absent cues are due to ineffective associative binding and reactivation processes.


American Journal of Psychology | 1987

Cognitive effort and the word frequency effect in recognition and lexical decision

Sharon A. Mutter; Shahin Hashtroudi

Cognitive effort requirements for high and low frequency words were assessed during study for a recognition test and during the performance of a lexical decision task. Recognition for these words was tested following each task. Low frequency words received greater effort than high frequency words during study for recognition, and these words were subsequently recognized better than high frequency words. Cognitive effort requirements during performance of an incidental lexical decision task were similar to those during study for recognition. Moreover, recognition performance following the lexical decision task resembled performance following a recognition expectancy. Overall, the results indicate that low frequency words require more extensive processing than high frequency words and that this difference in processing may be a factor in recognition word frequency effects.

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Leslie F. Plumlee

Western Kentucky University

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James H. Howard

The Catholic University of America

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Shahin Hashtroudi

George Washington University

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Amy R. Schirmer

Western Kentucky University

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Anthony R. Atchley

Western Kentucky University

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Elizabeth S. Parker

National Institutes of Health

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Emily R. Patterson

Western Kentucky University

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