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Viswanathan, Navin; Magnuson, James S.; Fowler, Carol A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
According to one approach to speech perception, listeners perceive speech by applying general pattern matching mechanisms to the acoustic signal (e.g., Diehl, Lotto, & Holt, 2004). An alternative is that listeners perceive the phonetic gestures that structured the acoustic signal (e.g., Fowler, 1986). The two accounts have offered different…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Phonology, Auditory Perception, Acoustics
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Masin, Sergio Cesare; Busetto, Martina – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2010
The study reports empirical tests of Anderson's, Haubensak's, Helson's, and Parducci's rating models when two end anchors are used for rating. The results show that these models cannot predict the judgment effect called here the Dai Pra effect. It is shown that an extension of Anderson's model is consistent with this effect. The results confirm…
Descriptors: Models, Predictive Measurement, Stimuli, Validity
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Scullin, Michael K.; McDaniel, Mark A.; Einstein, Gilles O. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
To examine the processes that support prospective remembering, previous research has often examined whether the presence of a prospective memory task slows overall responding on an ongoing task. Although slowed task performance suggests that monitoring is present, this method does not clearly establish whether monitoring is functionally related to…
Descriptors: Cues, Memorization, Recall (Psychology), Memory
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Henriksson, Maria P.; Elwin, Ebba; Juslin, Peter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Although people often have to learn from environments with scarce and highly selective outcome feedback, the question of how nonfeedback trials are represented in memory and affect later performance has received little attention in models of learning and decision making. In this article, the authors use the generalized context model (Nosofsky,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Constructivism (Learning), Early Adolescents, Memory
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Yeari, Menahem; Goldsmith, Morris – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Is object-based attention mandatory or under strategic control? In an adapted spatial cuing paradigm, participants focused initially on a central arrow cue that was part of a perceptual group (Experiment 1) or a uniformly connected object (Experiment 2), encompassing one of the potential target locations. The cue always pointed to an opposite,…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Prompting, Probability, Attention
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Gilden, David L.; Thornton, Thomas L.; Marusich, Laura R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
The conditions for serial search are described. A multiple target search methodology (Thornton & Gilden, 2007) is used to home in on the simplest target/distractor contrast that effectively mandates a serial scheduling of attentional resources. It is found that serial search is required when (a) targets and distractors are mirror twins, and…
Descriptors: Infants, Attention, Theories, Perception
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Larsen, Sean – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2010
In the context of a teaching experiment in elementary group theory, interesting difficulties arose as undergraduate students struggled to make sense of the meaning of the associative property as they reinvented the group concept. A subsequent exploration of the research literature revealed similar difficulties have been observed in research with…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mathematics Education, Literature, Preservice Teacher Education
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Krishnan, Ananthanarayan; Gandour, Jackson T.; Smalt, Christopher J.; Bidelman, Gavin M. – Brain and Language, 2010
Experience-dependent enhancement of neural encoding of pitch in the auditory brainstem has been observed for only specific portions of native pitch contours exhibiting high rates of pitch acceleration, irrespective of speech or nonspeech contexts. This experiment allows us to determine whether this language-dependent advantage transfers to…
Descriptors: Cues, Mandarin Chinese, Coding, Cognitive Processes
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Wu, Rachel; Kirkham, Natasha Z. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Human infants develop a variety of attentional mechanisms that allow them to extract relevant information from a cluttered multimodal world. We know that both social and nonsocial cues shift infants' attention, but not how these cues differentially affect learning of multimodal events. Experiment 1 used social cues to direct 8- and 4-month-olds'…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Learning Processes, Attention
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Mattock, Karen; Polka, Linda; Rvachew, Susan; Krehm, Madelaine – Developmental Science, 2010
English, French, and bilingual English-French 17-month-old infants were compared for their performance on a word learning task using the Switch task. Object names presented a /b/ vs. /g/ contrast that is phonemic in both English and French, and auditory strings comprised English and French pronunciations by an adult bilingual. Infants were…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Infants, Monolingualism
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Carreiras, Manuel; Dunabeitia, Jon Andoni; Vergara, Marta; de la Cruz-Pavia, Irene; Laka, Itziar – Cognition, 2010
Studies from many languages consistently report that subject relative clauses (SR) are easier to process than object relatives (OR). However, Hsiao and Gibson (2003) report an OR preference for Chinese, a finding that has been contested. Here we report faster OR versus SR processing in Basque, an ergative, head-final language with pre-nominal…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Language Processing, Chinese
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Bhathal, Ragbir; Sharma, Manjula D.; Mendez, Alberto – European Journal of Physics, 2010
This paper describes an educational analysis of a first year physics experiment on standing waves for engineering students. The educational analysis is based on the ACELL (Advancing Chemistry by Enhancing Learning in the Laboratory) approach which includes a statement of educational objectives and an analysis of student learning experiences. The…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Engineering, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Topolinski, Sascha; Reber, Rolf – Cognition, 2010
A temporal contiguity hypothesis for the experience of veracity is tested which states that a solution candidate to a cognitive problem is more likely to be experienced as correct the faster it succeeds the problem. Experiment 1 varied the onset time of the appearance of proposed solutions to anagrams (50 ms vs. 150 ms) and found for both correct…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Probability, Outcomes of Education, Ethics
Olken, Benjamin A.; Onishi, Junko; Wong, Susan – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2012
This paper reports an experiment in over 3,000 Indonesian villages designed to test the role of performance incentives in improving the efficacy of aid programs. Villages in a randomly-chosen one-third of subdistricts received a block grant to improve 12 maternal and child health and education indicators, with the size of the subsequent year's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Incentives, Rural Areas
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Thomm, Eva; Bromme, Rainer – Science Education, 2012
The Internet is a convenient source of information about science-based topics (e.g., health matters). Whereas experts are familiar with the conventions of "true" scientific discourse and the assessment of scientific information, laypeople may have great difficulty choosing among, evaluating, and deciding on the vast amount of information…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Internet, Expertise, Evaluative Thinking
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