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McCall, Robert B.; Kennedy, Cynthia Bellows – Child Development, 1980
Several propositions deduced from the discrepancy hypothesis were tested with four-month-old infants using random shapes in a habituation/discrepancy paradigm. (JMB)
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Infants, Pattern Recognition
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Deak, Gedeon O.; Bauer, Patricia J. – Child Development, 1996
Three experiments explored effects of stimulus and task factors on tendency to categorize according to taxonomic relations when those relations conflict with appearances. When provided with information that constrained categorization, preschoolers and adults reliably based their decisions on taxonomic relations between physically dissimilar items.…
Descriptors: Adults, Classification, Performance Factors, Preschool Children
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Moss, Madelyn; And Others – Child Development, 1988
Two studies found infants' scores on the Range of State Cluster of the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale with Kansas Supplements to correlate significantly with visual discrimination performance at three months of age. The correlation with behavioral state organization contradicted the prediction that orientation scores would predict visual…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Cognitive Development, Infants, Neonates
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Quinn, Paul C. – Child Development, 1994
Three experiments using the familiarization-novelty preference procedure confirmed the hypothesis that three-month-old infants could form categorical representations of spatial relations above and below. The infants, after being shown a familiarization diagram with a dot appearing in multiple locations below a line, showed a preference for a novel…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Infants, Spatial Ability
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DeLoache, Judy S. – Child Development, 1976
This study investigated 17-week-old infants' response to discrepancy in visual patterns as a function of rate of habituation. (BRT)
Descriptors: Infants, Memory, Research, Responses
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Streri, Arlette; Pecheaux, Marie-Germaine – Child Development, 1986
Investigates whether tactual habituation without the assistance of vision occurs in four- to six-month-old infants. Additionally tests the relevance of a habituation/reaction to novelty procedure in the tactual modality. Results show clearly that tactual habituation occurs in such infants, just as visual habituation does. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Habituation, Infant Behavior, Infants, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Maurer, Daphne; Barrera, Maria – Child Development, 1981
One- and two-month-old infants were shown schematic drawings of a human face with features arranged (1) naturally, (2) symmetrically but scrambled, and (3) asymmetrically and scrambled. Two-month-olds discriminated among all arangements and preferred the natural arrangement; one-month-olds showed no discrimination or preference. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Infant Behavior, Infants, Perceptual Development
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Melkman, Rachel; And Others – Child Development, 1976
The preference for color or form as bases for similarity judgments among preschoolers (ages 2-5) and its relationship to the differentiation of form and color concepts as indexed by discrimination, identification, and labeling were investigated. (SB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Concept Formation, Dimensional Preference, Preschool Education
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Rose, Susan A – Child Development, 1988
Investigated infants' integration of visual information across space and time. In four experiments, infants aged 12 months and 6 months viewed objects after watching light trace similar and dissimilar shapes. Infants looked longer at novel shapes, although six-month-olds did not recognize figures taking more than 10 seconds to trace. One-year-old…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infants, Perceptual Development, Psychological Studies
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Hollich, George; Newman, Rochelle S.; Jusczyk, Peter W. – Child Development, 2005
In 4 studies, 7.5-month-olds used synchronized visua-lauditory correlations to separate a target speech stream when a distractor passage was presented at equal loudness. Infants succeeded in a segmentation task (using the head-turn preference procedure with video familiarization) when a video of the talker's face was synchronized with the target…
Descriptors: Infants, Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Stimuli, Visual Stimuli
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Lord, Catherine – Child Development, 1974
An examination of the extent to which adults and children (7 and 11 years old) were able to make discriminations between fixations directed at their eyes and at different positions on their faces. (SDH)
Descriptors: Adults, Elementary School Students, Eye Fixations, Learning Theories
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Egeland, Byron – Child Development, 1974
Impulsive second grade, inner-city children, were trained to improve their search strategies on visual discrimination tasks. Groups with training improved their search strategies, while the untrained control group did not. (ST)
Descriptors: Conceptual Tempo, Discrimination Learning, Elementary School Students, Training
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Courchesne, Eric; And Others – Child Development, 1981
Differences in response of four- to seven-month-old infants to tachistoscopically presented photographs of two human faces suggest infants were able to remember a frequently presented face from trial to trial and discriminate it from a discrepant, infrequently presented face. Findings suggest event-related brain potential (ERP) responses could…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Infant Behavior, Infants, Memory
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Catherwood, Di; And Others – Child Development, 1989
Confirms that infants, like older children, are capable of responding categorically to stimuli of different shapes if these are similar in hue. (PCB)
Descriptors: Classification, Color, Infants, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Frick, Janet E.; Colombo, John – Child Development, 1996
Five experiments tested four-month-old infants' ability to recognize degraded visual targets as a function of individual differences in fixation duration. Found that short-looking infants were able to recognize degraded forms in both vertex (top or highest point)-absent and vertex-present conditions, but the vertex-absent discrimination was more…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences, Infants
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