Publication | Closed Access
Retention and transfer of morse code reception skill by novices: Part-whole training.
24
Citations
20
References
2001
Year
Training SystemNeurolinguisticsEducationCognitionPsycholinguisticsCommunicationAttentionLearning-by-doingLanguage LearningSocial SciencesSecond Language AcquisitionInitial TrainingEasy Initial TrainingComposite SkillsCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesBehavioral PrincipleAdaptive BehaviorJust-in-time LearningLearning ProblemCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesLearning SciencesPart-whole TrainingExperimental PsychologySpeech Communication
The training of composite skills requiring differential responding to a large set of stimuli raises issues about how to break down the whole task into parts and which parts should be trained first. Components of Morse code reception skill were identified, separated, and used to test whether initial training on a difficult part was more effective than initial training on an easy part. Initial training on a difficult subset of stimuli and on a difficult subtask both yielded disadvantages rather than the advantage implied by recent findings with different tasks. Incremental training should begin with the part yielding the most effective strategic skills, which appear to depend on characteristics of the task. In both present experiments, easy initial training led to adoption of an effective unitization strategy for representing codes. The hypothesis that procedural reinstatement at delayed testing leads to better retention was supported and extended.
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