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Graf, Markus – Psychological Bulletin, 2006
A basic problem of visual perception is how human beings recognize objects after spatial transformations. Three central classes of findings have to be accounted for: (a) Recognition performance varies systematically with orientation, size, and position; (b) recognition latencies are sequentially additive, suggesting analogue transformation…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Recognition (Psychology), Spatial Ability
Hommel, Bernhard; Li, Karen Z. H.; Li, Shu-Chen – Developmental Psychology, 2004
Gains and losses in visual search were studied across the life span in a representative sample of 298 individuals from 6 to 89 years of age. Participants searched for single-feature and conjunction targets of high or low eccentricity. Search was substantially slowed early and late in life, age gradients were more pronounced in conjunction than in…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aging (Individuals), Visual Perception
du Feu, Chris – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2005
Infants are not too young to engage in real, useful statistical work. This activity allowed comparisons between distributions of two species of flowers in three different habitats.
Descriptors: Infants, Statistics, Comparative Analysis, Visual Perception
Kay, Paul; Regier, Terry – Cognition, 2007
Proponents of a self-identified "relativist" view of cross-language color naming have confounded two questions: (1) Is color naming largely subject to local linguistic convention? and (2) Are cross-language color naming differences reflected in comparable differences in color cognition by their speakers? The "relativist"…
Descriptors: Color, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Schemata (Cognition)
Green, Ravonne A. – Journal of Access Services, 2009
This article describes the characteristics of patrons with learning disabilities (LD) and how these characteristics might affect library use. The lack of services for college patrons who have learning disabilities (LD) in this decade is much like the lack of adequate and appropriate services for high school patrons with LD in previous decades. The…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Educational Technology, Assistive Technology, Libraries
Stuart, Stephen N. – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2006
In this article, the author states that architects, musicians and other thoughtful people have, since the time of Pythagoras, been fascinated by various harmonious proportions. One, is the visual harmony attributed to Euclid, called "the golden section". He explores this concept in geometries of one, two and three dimensions. He added,…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Equations (Mathematics), Visual Perception
Maurer, Daphne; Mondloch, Catherine J.; Lewis, Terri L. – Developmental Science, 2007
Early experience preserves and refines many capabilities that emerge prenatally. Here we describe another role that it plays--establishing the neural substrate for capabilities that emerge at a much later point in development. The evidence comes from sleeper effects: permanent deficits when early experience was absent in capabilities that normally…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Early Experience, Neurological Organization, Brain
Santangelo, Valerio; Olivetti Belardinelli, Marta; Spence, Charles – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
Two experiments were conducted to examine whether abrupt onsets are capable of reflexively capturing attention when they occur outside the current focus of spatial attention, as would be expected if exogenous orienting operates in a truly automatic fashion. The authors established a highly focused attentional state by means of the central…
Descriptors: Prompting, Visual Perception, Auditory Perception, Attention Control
Peer reviewedCleveland, William S.; McGill, Robert – Science, 1985
Graphical perception is the visual decoding of the quantitative and qualitative information encoded on graphs. Some recent theoretical/experimental investigations of graphical perception are described, identifying certain elementary graphical-perception tasks that are performed in the visual decoding of quantitative information from graphs.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Graphics, Graphs, Microcomputers
Peer reviewedWiner, Gerald A.; Cottrell, Jane E.; Gregg, Virginia; Fournier, Jody S.; Bica, Lori A. – American Psychologist, 2002
Reviews research about a profound misconception among college students: the belief that the process of vision includes emanations from their ideas. Documents the strength and breadth of this phenomenon and the failure of traditional educational techniques to overcome this belief. Asserts that students are leaving psychology courses with flawed…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Misconceptions, Psychology
Damonte, Kathleen – Science and Children, 2005
A fly is buzzing around in the kitchen. You sneak up on it with a flyswatter, but just as you get close to it, it flies away. What makes flies and other insects so good at escaping from danger? The fact that insects have eyesight that can easily detect moving objects is one of the things that help them survive. In this month's Science Shorts,…
Descriptors: Entomology, Science Education, Science Activities, Vision
Goldberg, Beth – Art Education, 2005
Images with narrative intent are ideally suited for beginning art viewers. As cognitive psychologist Abigail Housen has discovered in her research on aesthetic development, viewers at this stage-children and adults alike-look for stories in art, even when the artist did not intend them. In this first "Aesthetic Stage" viewers are considered…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Visual Perception, Studio Art, Art Activities
Purves, Dale; Williams, S. Mark; Nundy, Surajit; Lotto, R. Beau – Psychological Review, 2004
The relationship between luminance (i.e., the photometric intensity of light) and its perception (i.e., sensations of lightness or brightness) has long been a puzzle. In addition to the mystery of why these perceptual qualities do not scale with luminance in any simple way, "illusions" such as simultaneous brightness contrast, Mach bands,…
Descriptors: Light, Probability, Vision, Visual Perception
Lavidor, Michal; Walsh, Vincent – Brain and Language, 2004
The right and left visual fields each project to the contralateral cerebral hemispheres, but the extent of the functional overlap of the two hemifields along the vertical meridian is still under debate. After presenting the spatial, temporal, and functional specifications of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), we show that TMS is particularly…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Word Recognition, Visual Perception
McKone, Elinor; Aitkin, Alex; Edwards, Mark – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
E. E. Cooper and T. J. Wojan (2000) applied the categorical-coordinate relations distinction to faces on the basis of a finding that two-eyes-up versus one-eye-up distortions had opposite effects in between-class (face normality) and within-class (face identity) tasks. However, Cooper and Wojan failed to match amount of metric change between their…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Physical Characteristics, Human Body, Experimental Psychology

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