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Peer reviewedBlanco, Manuel J.; Alvarez, Antonio A. – Intelligence, 1994
The relationship between general intelligence and the ability to ignore irrelevant stimuli appearing in the same visual field as an attended target was studied for 167 college students. Results indicate that psychometric intelligence does not tap visual focused attention. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedShafrir, Uri; Siegel, Linda S. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1994
This study with 47 university students having reading disabilities, 15 students with other learning disabilities, and 12 nondisabled readers found that most nondisabled subjects used a phonological rehearsal strategy for words and nonwords, whereas students with reading disabilities consistently used a strategy of visual scanning for these tasks.…
Descriptors: College Students, Decoding (Reading), Higher Education, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedHurley, Sandra Rollins – Reading Psychology, 1994
Shows that color blindness, whether partial or total, inhibits literacy acquisition. Offers a case study of a third grader with impaired color vision. Presents a review of literature on the topic. Notes that people with color vision deficits are often unaware of the handicap. (RS)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Color, Learning Disabilities, Literature Reviews
Peer reviewedYaniv, Ilan; Shatz, Marilyn – Child Development, 1990
In three experiments, children of three through six years of age were generally better able to reproduce a perceiver's perspective if a visual cue in the perceiver's line of sight was salient. Children had greater difficulty when the task hinged on attending to configural cues. Availability of distinctive cues affixed to objects facilitated…
Descriptors: Analogy, Cognitive Ability, Cues, Difficulty Level
Peer reviewedKernohan, James C. – Physics Teacher, 1991
The effect of background color on the perception of color by students is discussed. Explanations on why students only see certain colors when viewing colored marks on a blackboard through different color filters are provided. (KR)
Descriptors: Color, Light, Physics, Problem Solving
Peer reviewedGrossberg, Stephen; Rudd, Michael E. – Psychological Review, 1992
A large body of data is reviewed to support a new theory of motion perception described by S. Grossberg and M. E. Rudd (1989). The Motion Boundary Contour System is used to explain classical and recent data about motion perception that have not been explained by other models. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Processes, Epistemology, Equations (Mathematics)
Peer reviewedKestenbaum, Roberta; Nelson, Charles A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1992
Event-related potentials (ERPs) of children and adults were measured while subjects observed pictures of facial expressions. Adults had greater ERP responses to happy than to angry faces, whereas children had greater ERP responses to angry than to happy faces. (BC)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Anger, Facial Expressions
Peer reviewedBlanksby, D. C.; Langford, P. E. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1993
This article describes a visual assessment procedure (VAP) which evaluates capacity, attention, and processing (CAP) of infants and preschool children with visual impairments. The two-level battery considers, first, visual capacity and basic visual attention and, second, visual perceptual and cognitive abilities. A theoretical analysis of the…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Factor Analysis, Infants, Perception Tests
Peer reviewedSims-Knight, Judith E. – Visible Language, 1992
Describes the habits of human reasoning that distort designers' abilities to intuit how users will understand and respond to graphics. Advocates two solutions: investigating scientifically how visuals communicate to viewers, and using user-based iterative design to explore user's reactions while developing design prototypes. (SR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Research, Diagrams, Graphic Arts
Peer reviewedForeman, Nigel; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1991
Tested infants' latency in turning toward stimulus patterns and the duration of their initial fixation. Results showed that "turning latency" fell in a linear manner from 36 to 120 weeks after conception. Fixation time fell abruptly at 53 weeks. Preterm and full-term infants showed the same developmental trends. (BC)
Descriptors: Eye Fixations, Foreign Countries, Infants, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedBauer, Patricia J.; Liebl, Monica; Stennes, Leif – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1998
Examined preschool children's inferences about the likely appearance of a target figure based on information about the figure's occupation or personality traits. Without explicit gender-category information, girls' performance on gender-consistent and gender-inconsistent trials was equivalent; boys performed better on same-sex attributes. With…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Familiarity
Peer reviewedCorkum, Valerie; Moore, Chris – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Two experiments examined the origins of joint visual attention in 6- to 11-month-olds with a training procedure. Results indicated that joint visual attention does not reliably appear prior to 10 months; from about 8 months, a gaze-following response can be learned; and simple learning is not sufficient as the mechanism through which joint…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Cues
Peer reviewedRakison, David H.; Butterworth, George E. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Two experiments used object-manipulation tasks to examine whether one- to two-year-olds form superordinate-like categories by attending to object parts. Findings indicated that 14- and 18-month-olds behaved systematically toward categories with different, but not matching, parts. Without part differences, none formed superordinate categories.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Classification, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedMorse, Mary T. – RE:view, 1999
Describes cortical visual impairment (CVI) as a complex condition that is not an eye condition but a brain condition. Cautions practitioners that children with CVI do not exhibit similar behaviors, that a single approach does not work for all children, and that treatment is a dynamic process. (CR)
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Children, Disability Identification, Intervention
Peer reviewedDannemiller, James L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2000
Examined exogenous orienting among infants between 7 and 21 weeks of age in 2 experiments using display with multiple potential attention targets. Found that as early as 7 weeks of age, sensitivity for a small moving stimulus can be significantly influenced by the simultaneous presence of competing attention targets. Found large increases in…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Attention Control, Color


