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Elizabeth J. Marsh

Researcher at Duke University

Publications -  118
Citations -  6609

Elizabeth J. Marsh is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Reading (process). The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 110 publications receiving 5629 citations. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth J. Marsh include Washington University in St. Louis & Stanford University.

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Improving Students’ Learning With Effective Learning Techniques: Promising Directions From Cognitive and Educational Psychology

TL;DR: This monograph discusses 10 learning techniques that benefit learners of different ages and abilities and have been shown to boost students’ performance across many criterion tasks and even in educational contexts.
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The positive and negative consequences of multiple-choice testing.

TL;DR: The authors examined the consequences of taking a multiple-choice test on a later general knowledge test in which students were warned not to guess and obtained a large positive testing effect: Prior testing of facts aided final cued-recall performance.
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Knowledge does not protect against illusory truth.

TL;DR: Contrary to prior suppositions, illusory truth effects occurred even when participants knew better, andMultinomial modeling demonstrated that participants sometimes rely on fluency even if knowledge is also available to them, demonstrating knowledge neglect, or the failure to rely on stored knowledge, in the face of fluent processing experiences.
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Learning facts from fiction.

TL;DR: The authors investigated how people learn and integrate information from fictional sources with their general world knowledge and found that repeated reading of the stories increased the effect after a delay of one week, effects of story exposure were strongest for items that also had been tested in the first session.
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Biased retellings of events yield biased memories.

TL;DR: Biased memory is a consequence of the reorganizing schema guiding the retelling perspective, in addition to the effects of rehearsing specific information in retelling.