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Faraday, Alex – Early Child Development and Care, 1990
Explores theories that underlie thinking concerning art education. Focuses on the importance of the process of children's looking at pictures and reviews critical studies on the topic. Also considers numerous aspects of Rudolph Arnheim's theories about the processes of seeing and thinking. (BG)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
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Fink, Edward L.; And Others – Communication Research, 1989
Uses a spatial model to examine the relationship between stimulus exposure, cognition, and affect. Notes that this model accounts for cognitive changes that a stimulus may acquire as a result of exposure. Concludes that the spatial model is useful for evaluating the mere exposure effect and that affective change does not require cognitive change.…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Cognitive Processes, Communication Research, Higher Education
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Dodd, Barbara; Burnham, Denis – Volta Review, 1988
Three methods by which hearing adults process speechread information are discussed: selective adaptation, immediate memory, and repetition priming. Also discussed are mental representations of speech by hearing-impaired and hearing children, infants' responses to speechread stimuli compared to other stimuli, infants' speechreading of a foreign…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Comprehension, Hearing Impairments
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Jones, Susan S.; Smith, Linda B. – Cognitive Development, 1993
Reviews current research on children's concepts and categories that reflects a growing consensus that nonperceptual knowledge is central to concepts and determines category membership, whereas perceptual knowledge is peripheral in concepts and only a rough guide to category membership. Argues that there is no compelling basis in theory or in data…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education
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Mandler, Jean M. – Cognitive Development, 1993
Comments on the article by Jones and Smith in this issue. Responds to the theses that perceptual information is as much at the core of concepts as is nonperceptual information and that concepts are not represented as such but are computed on-line when needed. Presents a view of the relationship between perception and conceptual knowledge…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education
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Mervis, Carolyn B.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1993
Comments on the article by Jones and Smith in this issue. Describes a program of research that demonstrates the important influence of perception on the structure of concepts. Proposes that both perceptual and nonperceptual information are important to conceptual structure throughout the continuum of knowledge acquisition and that perception is a…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education
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Gelman, Susan A.; Medin, Douglas L. – Cognitive Development, 1993
Comments on the article by Jones and Smith in this issue. Outlines different perspectives from which the issue of conceptual development is approached, elaborating on the functions concepts serve and variations in those functions. Notes points of agreement with the perceptual knowledge view and offers comments on the research supporting the…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education
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Colombo, John; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1995
Investigates the dominance of global versus local visual properties in four-month-old infants as a function of individual differences in fixation duration. Suggests that long-looking infants process visual information more slowly than short-looking infants, and there may be qualitative differences in the manner in which the two groups of infants…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Dimensional Preference, Discrimination Learning
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Catherwood, Di – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1994
Explores cognitive development in early childhood education and examines four kinds of prevailing misconceptions in the light of recent evidence: (1) infants and very young children are limited to sensorimotor cognition; (2) young children's cognition is animistic; (3) young children's thought is egocentric; and (4) young children can think only…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Restructuring, Early Childhood Education
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Todman, John; Seedhouse, Elizabeth – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1994
Studied 18 deaf and 18 hearing childrens' (aged 6.8 to 16.6 years) performance on short-term memory tasks involving production of action responses to previously paired visual stimuli. Deaf children showed superior performance on the simultaneous presentation-free recall task and inferior performance on the serial presentation-serial recall task.…
Descriptors: Children, Coding, Cognitive Processes, Deafness
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Smith, Linda B.; Sera, Maria D. – Cognitive Psychology, 1992
Six experiments involving 279 2- to 5-year-old children, 52 undergraduates, and 16 adults examined the interaction of perception and language in the development of magnitude marking of size, loudness, and achromatic color. Results suggest converging interactions between perception and language for size and loudness and antagonistic interactions…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Processes
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Schraw, Gregory – Instructional Science, 1998
Describes two aspects of metacognition, knowledge of cognition and regulation of cognition, and how they relate to domain-specific knowledge and cognitive abilities. It is argued that metacognitive knowledge is multidimensional, domain-general in nature, and teachable. Four instructional strategies are described for promoting the construction and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Knowledge Level, Learning Processes
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Jusczyk, Peter W. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1999
Discusses the nature of speech perceptual capacities that infants possess, changes that come about with increased exposure to language, how growing understanding of native-language sound organization is used in developing word-segmentation strategies, and how developing word-segmentation abilities may facilitate discovery of grammatical…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Developmental Stages, Grammar, Infants
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Smith-Shank, Deborah L. – Arts and Learning Research, 2000
Introduces a collection of short papers that focus on the body, visual culture, and semiotic awareness. States that the papers ask how do we know what we know, through what filters do we understand, and what codes are used to make sense of the world? (CMK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Cognitive Processes, Cultural Awareness, Culture
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Guajardo, Jose J.; Woodward, Amanda L. – Infancy, 2004
Three studies investigated the role of surface attributes in infants' identification of agents, using a habituation paradigm designed to tap infants' interpretation of grasping as goal directed (Woodward, 1998). When they viewed a bare human hand grasping objects, 7- and 12-month-old infants focused on the relation between the hand and its goal.…
Descriptors: Infants, Habituation, Cognitive Processes, Visual Stimuli
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