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Altmeyer, Kristin; Barz, Michael; Lauer, Luisa; Peschel, Markus; Sonntag, Daniel; Brünken, Roland; Malone, Sarah – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2023
Background: New methods are constantly being developed to adapt cognitive load measurement to different contexts. However, research on middle childhood students' cognitive load measurement is rare. Research indicates that the three cognitive load dimensions (intrinsic, extraneous, and germane) can be measured well in adults and teenagers using…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Cognitive Measurement, Children
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Eva Maagerø; Tone Sunde – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2016
In this article, we present and discuss a project in which children in two different environments, in Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon and in the south-eastern part of Norway, were given the opportunity to express themselves through drawings. We investigate how differently--and how similarly--the children express themselves when they were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Children, Freehand Drawing
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Price, C. Aaron; Lee, H.-S.; Malatesta, K. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2014
Stereoscopic technology (3D) is rapidly becoming ubiquitous across research, entertainment and informal educational settings. Children of today may grow up never knowing a time when movies, television and video games were not available stereoscopically. Despite this rapid expansion, the field's understanding of the impact of stereoscopic…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Science Education, Informal Education, Children
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Puspitawati, Ira; Jebrane, Ahmed; Vinter, Annie – Child Development, 2014
This study investigated the spatial analysis of tactile hierarchical patterns in 110 early-blind children aged 6-8 to 16-18 years, as compared to 90 blindfolded sighted children, in a naming and haptic drawing task. The results revealed that regardless of visual status, young children predominantly produced local responses in both tasks, whereas…
Descriptors: Blindness, Cognitive Processes, Child Development, Naming
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Hentschel, Maren; Lange-Kuttner, Christiane; Averbeck, Bruno B. – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2016
The study investigated sequence learning from stochastic feedback in boys with Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and typically developed (TD) boys. We asked boys with ASD from Nigeria and the UK as well as age- and gender-matched controls (also males only) to deduce a sequence of four left and right button presses, LLRR, RRLL, LRLR, RLRL, LRRL and…
Descriptors: Males, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Foreign Countries
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Salowitz, Nicole M. G.; Eccarius, Petra; Karst, Jeffrey; Carson, Audrey; Schohl, Kirsten; Stevens, Sheryl; Van Hecke, Amy Vaughan; Scheidt, Robert A. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2013
Thirteen autistic and 14 typically developing children (controls) imitated hand/arm gestures and performed mirror drawing; both tasks assessed ability to reorganize the relationship between spatial goals and the motor commands needed to acquire them. During imitation, children with autism were less accurate than controls in replicating hand shape,…
Descriptors: Autism, Imitation, Cognitive Processes, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Nagai, Chiyoko; Inui, Toshio; Iwata, Makoto – Brain and Cognition, 2011
Williams syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by severe impairment of visuospatial abilities. Figure-drawing abilities, which are thought to reflect visuospatial abilities, have yet to be fully investigated in WS. The purpose of the present study was to clarify whether drawing abilities differ between WS individuals and…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Genetic Disorders, Visual Impairments, Spatial Ability
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Misailidi, Plousia; Bonoti, Fotini; Savva, Georgia – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2012
This article reports the results of a study which aimed to examine the development of children's ability to depict loneliness in their drawings. Seventy-eight children and 20 adults took part in the study. Participants were first asked a series of questions assessing their conceptions of loneliness, and were then invited to draw a picture that…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Childrens Art, Social Networks, Children
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Drake, Jennifer E.; Redash, Amanda; Coleman, Katelyn; Haimson, Jennifer; Winner, Ellen – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2010
We investigated whether typically-developing children with a gift for drawing realistically show the local processing bias seen in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Twenty-seven 6-12 year-olds made an observational drawing (scored for level of realism) and completed three local processing tasks, and parents completed the Childhood…
Descriptors: Autism, Talent, Asperger Syndrome, Cognitive Processes
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Bruck, Maggie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2009
In 2 studies, children ages 3 to 7 years were asked to recall a series of touches that occurred during a previous staged event. The recall interview took place 1 week after the event in Study 1 and immediately after the event in Study 2. Each recall interview had 2 sections: In 1 section, children were given human figure drawings (HFDs) and were…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Semantics, Human Body, Recall (Psychology)
Martin, Nicole – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2008
The ability to attend to the human face is a striking and possibly characteristic deficit for individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study collected and reviewed data on how people with ASD approach the drawing task and represent faces in particular. Drawings that were created by 25 children and adolescents with autism spectrum…
Descriptors: Portraiture, Autism, Adolescents, Children
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Lange-Küttner, Christiane – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2010
Previous research showed that drawing facilitates memory (Bruck, Melnyk, & Ceci, 2000; Butler, Gross, & Hayne, 1995; Gross & Hayne, 1999). The current study investigated whether drawing strategies could predict spatial memory. Children show a developmental change from drawing object-place binding (object-based coding) to object-region…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Gender Differences, Memory, Freehand Drawing
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Picard, Delphine; Vinter, Annie – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
This study aimed at specifying the content of the representational redescription (RR) process assumed by Karmiloff-Smith (1992) with respect to the emergence of inter-representational flexibility in children's drawing behaviour. We hypothesized that the RR process included part-whole decomposition processes that are essential to the ability to…
Descriptors: Children, Freehand Drawing, Child Behavior, Cognitive Processes
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Sheppard, Elizabeth; Ropar, Danielle; Mitchell, Peter – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2007
Weak Central Coherence (Frith, 1989) predicts that, in autism, perceptual processing is relatively unaffected by conceptual analysis. Enhanced Perceptual Functioning (Mottron & Burack, 2001) predicts that the perceptual processing of those with autism is less influenced by conceptual analysis only when higher-level processing is detrimental to…
Descriptors: Autism, Cognitive Development, Coping, Cognitive Processes
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Morra, Sergio; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1988
Explores the development of children's ability to plan their drawings. Presents a conceptual framework and a process-structural model of the planning of drawings in childhood. Two experiments support the model's prediction of different patterns of results as a function of the working memory capacity of the subjects. (SKC)
Descriptors: Children, Childrens Art, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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