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What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedCatherwood, 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)
Peer reviewedMeltzoff, Andrew N. – Child Development, 1988
Children aged 14 and 24 months were shown television depictions of adults manipulating toys in novel ways. Infants at both ages showed imitation of television models, even after 24-hour delays. This deferred imitation has social and policy implications as it suggests that television viewing can potentially affect infant behavior and development…
Descriptors: Infants, Mass Media Effects, Psychological Studies, Television
Peer reviewedFreeseman, Laura J.; And Others – Child Development, 1993
Three experiments tested the hypothesis that the differences in infants' time of looking at a stimulus are due to infants' differential sensitivity to global and local visual information. Found that both long- and short-looking four-month-old infants were sensitive to both types of information. These results do not support the hypothesis. (MDM)
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Ability, Eye Fixations, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedKahana-Kalman, Ronit; Walker-Andrews, Arlene S. – Child Development, 2001
Investigated the role of person familiarity in 3.5-month-olds' ability to recognize emotional expressions. Found that when more contextual information such as person familiarity was available, infants as young as 3.5 months recognized happy and sad expressions. Findings suggest that in early stages, infants are sensitive to contextual information…
Descriptors: Emotional Experience, Emotional Response, Facial Expressions, Familiarity
Bertenthal, Bennett I.; Longo, Matthew R.; Kenny, Sarah – Child Development, 2007
The perceived spatiotemporal continuity of objects depends on the way they appear and disappear as they move in the spatial layout. This study investigated whether infants' predictive tracking of a briefly occluded object is sensitive to the manner by which the object disappears and reappears. Five-, 7-, and 9-month-old infants were shown a ball…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Infants, Visual Perception, Object Permanence
Peer reviewedButterworth, George – Child Development, 1975
Reports two experiments which were designed to establish whether errors in infants' manual searches for objects are caused by changes in the location of an object or by the change in the relation between old and new hiding places. (JMB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Eye Hand Coordination, Infant Behavior, Object Permanence
Peer reviewedVellutino, Frank R.; And Others – Child Development, 1975
This study investigated the hypothesis that specific reading disability is caused by visual-spatial disorder. Poor and normal readers in the second and sixth grades were presented both verbal and nonverbal stimuli and asked to identify and/or reproduce them orally and graphically. Results are discussed. (CS)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Reading Difficulty
Peer reviewedReese, Hayne W. – Child Development, 1975
The purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which verbal processes influence recognition memory for visual scenes in preschool children. Children were shown line drawings of 12 pairs of items and were asked to describe them. One week later, a recognition test was given in which ability to remember elaborated and unelaborated pictures…
Descriptors: Memory, Pattern Recognition, Preschool Children, Preschool Education
Peer reviewedFantz, Robert L.; Miranda, Simon B. – Child Development, 1975
Human neonates selectively fixated patterns with curved rather than straight contours when the outermost contours differed in this form variable and when quantitative variables were controlled. Data indicated the presence from birth of a discrimination ability basic to later form perception. (Author/ED)
Descriptors: Attention, Eye Fixations, Infant Behavior, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedWalker-Andrews, Arlene S.; Lennon, Elizabeth M. – Child Development, 1985
Examines, in two experiments, 5-month-old infants' sensitivity to auditory-visual specification of distance and direction of movement. One experiment presented two films with soundtracks in either a match or mismatch condition; the second showed the two films side-by-side with a single soundtrack appropriate to one. Infants demonstrated visual…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Dimensional Preference, Distance
Peer reviewedGregg, Claudette L.; And Others – Child Development, 1976
Forty-eight neonates were randomly assigned to view a moving stimulus either in the horizontal or the upright position, with or without added vestibular stimulation and with or without pacifier sucking. Results indicate that vestibular proprioceptive stimulation, provided horizontally or semi-vertically, significantly enhanced visual tracking.…
Descriptors: Human Posture, Infant Behavior, Infants, Neonates
Peer reviewedMcGurk, Harry – Child Development, 1972
Results indicate that for children in this study's age range orientation is a less salient discriminative cue than either size or color. (Author/MB)
Descriptors: Dimensional Preference, Discrimination Learning, Orientation, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedCohen, Leslie B. – Child Development, 1972
Results support the contention that infant attention should be divided into separate attention-getting and attention-holding processes. (Author)
Descriptors: Attention, Attention Span, Eye Fixations, Infants
Peer reviewedFisher, Celia B. – Child Development, 1979
In Experiment I, 24 preschoolers were tested on left-right, vertical-horizontal, and mirror-image oblique discriminations under essentially context-free conditions. Experiment II contrasted children's performance under context-free conditions with their ability to discriminate orientation in the presence of external visual cues. (RH)
Descriptors: Cues, Memory, Orientation, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedFarkas, Mitchell S.; Smothergill, Daniel W. – Child Development, 1979
Two experiments investigated the process by which children encode briefly presented spatial positions. First, third, and fifth graders were asked to judge whether a test dot occupied the same position on a card as any one of a number of dots which had been presented tachistoscopically. (JMB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students

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