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Pinker, Steven – 1983
Three experiments tested the hypothesis that graphs convey information effectively because they can display global trends as geometric patterns that visual systems encode easily. A novel type of graph was invented in which angles/lengths of line segments joined end-to-end represented variables of rainfall and temperature of a set of months. It was…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Educational Research, Graphs
Wittler, Janette Marie – 1983
The act of composition is based on perception, selection, and arrangement in time and space of what is seen. How the world is seen depends on experience, memory, sensibility, discriminative powers, sexual identity, and cultural and historical contexts. Students can learn to understand how their personality affects what they see by maintaining…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Multimedia Instruction, Teaching Methods, Visual Aids
Vurpillot, Eliane – 1983
Human infants are sensitive from birth to some intrinsic properties of objects; they are also sensitive to position. During the first weeks of life, pertinent dimensions of differentiation between objects are relative to global properties of the entire object or pattern. Position is defined by the direction of a displacement: the trajectory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Infant Behavior, Infants, Literature Reviews
Brannstrom, Lauritz – 1980
The visual scanning of redundant and random spatial configurations of two-digit numbers was investigated in a target recognition task. The experimental technique involved a brief exposure of a probe (a two-digit number) at the center of the visual field, followed by a spatial pattern of 16 two-digit numbers which included the matching target in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Eye Movements, Patterned Responses
Brannstrom, Lauritz – 1980
The spatial layout of visual displays was evaluated by means of three magnitude estimation tasks and one reproduction task. Each stimulus display consisted of 16 randomly-drawn, two-digit numbers. Six different spatial layouts, or display types, were used: systematic vs. random spatial order of numbers; regular vs. irregular boundaries of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Evaluation Methods, Patterned Responses
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Barufaldi, James P.; Dietz, Maureen A. – Science Education, 1975
Visual stimuli to include solid objects, photographs, and drawings of the objects were used to study the process of visual perception as an inherent part of visual observation and visual comparison skills. Found that the different types of stimuli affected performance. (EB)
Descriptors: Achievement, Educational Research, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Meyrowitz, Joshua – 1974
Based on research suggesting spatial zones of proximity in human behavior (individuals have definable zones of intimate, personal, social, and public space), it was hypothesized that "framed shots" of people on television screens would suggest specific distances to the viewer. The hypotheses were that subjects would estimate a greater…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Distance, Higher Education, Nonverbal Communication
Francis, Patricia L.; And Others – 1980
In an attempt to address the issue of bimodal coordination of featural stimuli, the sensitivity of 3-month-old infants to the auditory and visual components of male and female stimulus configurations was examined. Measures were made of the infants' visual attention to a male or female face while they listened to a male voice, female voice, or to…
Descriptors: Attention, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
Strauss, Mark S.; And Others – 1977
The ability of 5-month-old infants to recognize two-dimensional (pictorial) representations of three-dimensional objects was investigated. Subjects were 24 5-month-old infants. The novelty preference technique was employed: all infants were familiarized with a three-dimensional object--a doll. Following familiarization, three novelty tests were…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Infant Behavior, Infants, Perceptual Development
COHEN, DAVID B. – 1967
THE EFFECT OF INCIDENTAL VISUAL STIMULI ON THE EFFICIENCY OF LEARNING FACTUAL MATERIAL BY FRESHMAN COLLEGE STUDENTS WAS INVESTIGATED. THE INVESTIGATORS DETERMINED WHETHER THE PROVISION OF INCIDENTAL STIMULI, WHEN USED TO FACILITATE LEARNING, RESULTED IN IMPROVED TEST PERFORMANCE. BRIEF, HIGH INTENSITY STIMULI, SEX DIFFERENCE, COLOR OF FOCAL…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Educational Research, Learning, Learning Processes
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Gummerman, Kent; And Others – 1975
This paper reports on three studies concerned with aspects of human visual information processing. Study I was an effort to measure the duration of iconic storage using a partial report method in children ranging in age from 6 to 13 years. Study II was designed to detect age related changes in the rate of processing (perceptually encoding) letters…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Elementary School Students, Junior High School Students
Moore, Bert; And Others – 1975
The major objective of this study was to explore how preschool children's ability to delay gratification was affected when children were asked to attend to actual rewards rather than pictures of rewards. Sixty subjects, 3 to 5 years of age, were given a choice between two rewards and then placed in a delay of gratification situation. Half of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Delay of Gratification, Pictorial Stimuli, Preschool Education
Kuo, Shang-Wu; Katz, Leonard – 1972
Two stimuli of either small or capital letters were presented successively by tachistoscopic projectors. College students serving as subjects were requested to respond "yes" if the first stimulus (only one letter) was physically identical to or the same name of one of the letters in the second stimulus. The display size of the second stimulus was…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Information Processing, Learning Processes
Haber, Ralph Norman – 1969
Two groups of children took part in this longitudinal study of eidetic imagery (EI). The New Haven sample consisted of 12 elementary school children, and the Rochester sample consisted of 23 children (aged 7 to 11 years at the beginning of the study). The study was designed to find out some of the qualities of EI and its relationship to memory. An…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Eidetic Imagery, Elementary School Students, Longitudinal Studies
Johnson, Raymond L.; Cortwright, Richard W. – 1969
An exploratory investigation was made of cross-modality matching within the context of word recognition skills among beginning adult readers. The specific aim of the study was to assess the possibility that a deficit in cross-modality matching might be potentially useful as a diagnostic and predictive indicator of the rate at which adults learn to…
Descriptors: Adult Reading Programs, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Multisensory Learning
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