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Jones, Manon W.; Branigan, Holly P.; Hatzidaki, Anna; Obregon, Mateo – Cognition, 2010
We report a study that investigated the widely held belief that naming-speed deficits in developmental dyslexia reflect impaired access to lexical-phonological codes. To investigate this issue, we compared adult dyslexic and adult non-dyslexic readers' performance when naming and semantically categorizing arrays of objects. Dyslexic readers…
Descriptors: Semantics, Dyslexia, Cognitive Processes, Adults
Metcalfe, Janet; Eich, Teal S.; Castel, Alan D. – Cognition, 2010
Metacognitions of agency were investigated using a computer task in which X's and O's streamed from the top of a computer screen, and the participants moved the mouse to get the cursor to touch the X's and avoid the O's. After each 15 s trial, participants made judgments of agency and judgments of performance. Objective control was either…
Descriptors: College Students, Older Adults, Metacognition, Computer Assisted Testing
Casasanto, Daniel; Dijkstra, Katinka – Cognition, 2010
Can simple motor actions affect how efficiently people retrieve emotional memories, and influence what they choose to remember? In Experiment 1, participants were prompted to retell autobiographical memories with either positive or negative valence, while moving marbles either upward or downward. They retrieved memories faster when the direction…
Descriptors: Motion, Memory, Cues, Attribution Theory
Sloman, Steven A.; Fernbach, Philip M.; Hagmayer, York – Cognition, 2010
The paper sets out to reveal conditions enabling diagnostic self-deception, people's tendency to deceive themselves about the diagnostic value of their own actions. We characterize different types of self-deception in terms of the distinction between intervention and observation in causal reasoning. One type arises when people intervene but choose…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Intelligence, Educational Policy, Deception
Barner, David; Brooks, Neon; Bale, Alan – Cognition, 2011
When faced with a sentence like, "Some of the toys are on the table", adults, but not preschoolers, compute a scalar implicature, taking the sentence to imply that not all the toys are on the table. This paper explores the hypothesis that children fail to compute scalar implicatures because they lack knowledge of relevant scalar alternatives to…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Sentences, Role, Inferences
Eye Movements Reveal the Time-Course of Anticipating Behaviour Based on Complex, Conflicting Desires
Ferguson, Heather J.; Breheny, Richard – Cognition, 2011
The time-course of representing others' perspectives is inconclusive across the currently available models of ToM processing. We report two visual-world studies investigating how knowledge about a character's basic preferences (e.g. "Tom's favourite colour is pink") and higher-order desires (his wish to keep this preference secret) compete to…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Personality, Human Body, Language Processing
Chermahini, Soghra Akbari; Hommel, Bernhard – Cognition, 2010
Human creativity has been claimed to rely on the neurotransmitter dopamine, but evidence is still sparse. We studied whether individual performance (N=117) in divergent thinking (alternative uses task) and convergent thinking (remote association task) can be predicted by the individual spontaneous eye blink rate (EBR), a clinical marker of…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Creativity, Human Body, Creative Thinking
Foulsham, Tom; Cheng, Joey T.; Tracy, Jessica L.; Henrich, Joseph; Kingstone, Alan – Cognition, 2010
Human visual attention operates in a context that is complex, social and dynamic. To explore this, we recorded people taking part in a group decision-making task and then showed video clips of these situations to new participants while tracking their eye movements. Observers spent the majority of time looking at the people in the videos, and in…
Descriptors: Social Status, Eye Movements, Attention, Interpersonal Relationship
Ditman, Tali; Brunye, Tad T.; Mahoney, Caroline R.; Taylor, Holly A. – Cognition, 2010
Recent research has suggested that reading involves the mental simulation of events and actions described in a text. It is possible however that previous findings did not tap into processes engaged during natural reading but rather those triggered by task demands. The present study examined whether readers spontaneously mentally simulate the…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Memory, Prediction, Reading Processes
Conty, Laurence; Gimmig, David; Belletier, Clement; George, Nathalie; Huguet, Pascal – Cognition, 2010
Current models in social neuroscience advance that eye contact may automatically recruit cognitive resources. Here, we directly tested this hypothesis by evaluating the distracting strength of eye contact on concurrent visual processing in the well-known Stroop's paradigm. As expected, participants showed stronger Stroop interference under…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Eye Movements, Models, Control Groups
Friedman-Hill, Stacia R.; Wagman, Meryl R.; Gex, Saskia E.; Pine, Daniel S.; Leibenluft, Ellen; Ungerleider, Leslie G. – Cognition, 2010
In this study, we attempted to clarify whether distractibility in ADHD might arise from increased sensory-driven interference or from inefficient top-down control. We employed an attentional filtering paradigm in which discrimination difficulty and distractor salience (amount of image "graying") were parametrically manipulated. Increased…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Cognitive Processes, Children, Error Patterns
Carrion, Ricardo E.; Keenan, Julian P.; Sebanz, Natalie – Cognition, 2010
Human social cognition critically relies on the ability to deceive others. However, the cognitive and neural underpinnings of deception are still poorly understood. Why does lying place increased demands on cognitive control? The present study investigated whether cognitive control processes during deception are recruited due to the need to…
Descriptors: Social Cognition, Deception, Diagnostic Tests, Cognitive Ability
Marti, Sebastien; Sackur, Jerome; Sigman, Mariano; Dehaene, Stanislas – Cognition, 2010
Psychologists often dismiss introspection as an inappropriate measure, yet subjects readily volunteer detailed descriptions of the time and effort that they spent on a task. Are such reports really so inaccurate? We asked subjects to perform a psychological refractory period experiment followed by extensive quantified introspection. On each trial,…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Prediction, Psychology, Phenomenology
Haun, Daniel B. M.; Rapold, Christian J.; Janzen, Gabriele; Levinson, Stephen C. – Cognition, 2011
The present paper explores cross-cultural variation in spatial cognition by comparing spatial reconstruction tasks by Dutch and Namibian elementary school children. These two communities differ in the way they predominantly express spatial relations in language. Four experiments investigate cognitive strategy preferences across different levels of…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Language Usage, Contrastive Linguistics, Cultural Differences
Christie, Tamara; Slaughter, Virginia – Cognition, 2010
Three experiments demonstrate that biological movement facilitates young infants' recognition of the whole human form. A body discrimination task was used in which 6-, 9-, and 12-month-old infants were habituated to typical human bodies and then shown scrambled human bodies at the test. Recovery of interest to the scrambled bodies was observed in…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Infants, Human Body, Habituation

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