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Impact of Schemas01:30

Impact of Schemas

Schemas are cognitive structures that provide a framework for interpreting and organizing social information. They help individuals navigate complex environments by offering expectations about people, events, and behaviors. Schemas influence attention, encoding, and retrieval processes, thereby shaping the entire trajectory of information processing in social contexts.Attention and Cognitive LoadDuring initial attention, schemas function as filters that prioritize schema-consistent information,...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 29, 2026

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets
08:45

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets

Published on: December 5, 2014

Children's Darting (Not Diffuse) Attentional Spotlight Reduces Memory Selectivity for Relevant Content.

Alexandra Decker1,2, Marlie Tandoc3, Hyuna Cho4

  • 1McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.

Developmental Science
|January 19, 2026
PubMed
Summary

Children

Keywords:
attention dynamicsmemory formationselective attention

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Last Updated: Jun 29, 2026

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets
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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology

Background:

  • Children often recall distracting details more effectively than adults.
  • This phenomenon may stem from immature selective attention in children.
  • Understanding this link is crucial for explaining children's broader learning patterns.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To establish the connection between immature selective attention and children's enhanced learning of irrelevant information.
  • To differentiate between "diffuse" and "darting" attention mechanisms in children's memory.
  • To explain why children remember distracting details better than adults.

Main Methods:

  • A comparative study involving 130 children and adults.
  • Assessment of selective attention and memory recall for relevant and irrelevant information.
  • Analysis of memory associations between relevant and irrelevant details from the same event.

Main Results:

  • Immature attention in children leads to reduced memory selectivity for relevant content.
  • Adults formed associations between relevant and irrelevant information from the same event, unlike children.
  • Children's learning patterns suggest attention "darts" between items rather than being "diffuse."

Conclusions:

  • Children's immature and "darting" attention explains their superior recall of distracting details compared to adults.
  • This attentional pattern broadens children's learning by incorporating incidental information.
  • The findings highlight a developmental trade-off between focused learning and incidental memory.