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Showing 10,561 to 10,575 of 25,898 results Save | Export
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Woods, Rebecca J.; Wilcox, Teresa – Cognition, 2006
Recent research indicates that infants first use form and then surface features as the basis for individuating objects. However, very little is known about the underlying basis for infants' differential sensitivity to form than surface features. The present research assessed infants' sensitivity to luminance differences. Like other surface…
Descriptors: Infants, Visual Stimuli, Visual Perception, Visual Learning
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Tsal, Yehoshua; Makovski, Tal – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors devised a prestimulus-probe method to assess the allocation of attention as a function of participants' top-down expectancies concerning distractor and target locations. Participants performed the flanker task, and distractor locations remained fixed. On some trials, instead of the flanker display, either 2 simultaneous dots or a…
Descriptors: Attention, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Performance
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Gross, Charles G. – American Psychologist, 2005
The study of the neural basis of face perception is a major research interest today. This review traces its roots in monkey neuropsychology and neurophysiology beginning with the Kluver-Bucy syndrome and its fractionation and then continuing with lesion and single neuron recording studies of inferior temporal cortex. The context and consequence of…
Descriptors: Neuropsychology, Psychological Studies, Primatology, Physiology
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Alvarez, George A.; Scholl, Brian J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
Real-world situations involve attending to spatially extended objects, often under conditions of motion and high processing load. The present experiments investigated such processing by requiring observers to attentionally track a number of long, moving lines. Concurrently, observers responded to sporadic probes as a measure of the distribution of…
Descriptors: Attention, Experiments, Visual Perception, Experimental Psychology
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Turk-Browne, Nicholas B.; Pratt, Jay – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
When testing between spotlight and activity distribution models of visual attention, D. LaBerge, R. L. Carlson, J. K. Williams, and B. G. Bunney (1997) used an experimental paradigm in which targets are embedded in 3 brief displays. This paradigm, however, may be confounded by retinal eccentricity effects and saccadic eye movements. When the…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Attention, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes
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Hubbard, Timothy L.; Ruppel, Susan E.; Courtney, Jon R. – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2005
If a moving stimulus (i.e., launcher) contacts a stationary target that subsequently begins to move, observers attribute motion of the target to the launcher (Michotte, 1946/1963). In experiments reported here, a stationary launcher adjacent to the target appeared or vanished and displacement in memory for the position of the target was measured.…
Descriptors: Motion, Memory, Stimuli, Perception
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Nelson, Deborah G. Kemler; Herron, Lindsay; Holt, Morghan B. – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Two studies investigated whether four-year-old children (12 in Experiment 1 with a mean age of 4;8 and 36 in Experiment 2 with a mean age of 4;7) invent names for new artifacts based on the objects' functions as opposed to their perceptual properties. Children informed about the intended functions of novel objects provided more name innovations…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Form Classes (Languages), Classification, Perception
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Bahrick, Lorraine E.; Lickliter, Robert; Flom, Ross – Infancy, 2006
According to the intersensory redundancy hypothesis (IRH), during early development, perception of nonredundantly specified properties is facilitated in unimodal stimulation as compared with bimodal stimulation. Later in development, attention becomes more flexible and infants can detect nonredundantly specified properties in both unimodal and…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Stimulation, Infants, Redundancy
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Valenza, Eloisa; Zulian, Luisa; Leo, Irene – Infancy, 2005
This study explored whether the reported inability of newborns to perceive object unity could result from the limited abilities of newborns to recognize the correspondence between 2 stimuli that were identical except for the presence or absence of an occluder. Five experiments were carried out using a visual habituation technique. The results of…
Descriptors: Neonates, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Experiments
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Samuelsson, Christina; Nettelbladt, Ulrika; Lofqvist, Anders – Child Language Teaching and Therapy, 2005
A previous study has shown that Swedish children with language impairment have prosodic problems at different levels of language. The aim of this study is to investigate prosodic problems at the discourse level in two of the children to see whether they are related to pragmatic problems. Prosodic and pragmatic abilities were assessed by perceptual…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Suprasegmentals, Children, Pragmatics
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Amso, Dima; Johnson, Scott P. – Developmental Psychology, 2006
The authors examined how visual selection mechanisms may relate to developing cognitive functions in infancy. Twenty-two 3-month-old infants were tested in 2 tasks on the same day: perceptual completion and visual search. In the perceptual completion task, infants were habituated to a partly occluded moving rod and subsequently presented with …
Descriptors: Attention, Infants, Cognitive Development, Visual Stimuli
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Sampson, Demetrios G., Ed.; Spector, J. Michael, Ed.; Ifenthaler, Dirk, Ed.; Isaías, Pedro, Ed. – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2017
These proceedings contain the papers of the 14th International Conference on Cognition and Exploratory Learning in the Digital Age (CELDA 2017), 18-20 October 2017, which has been organized by the International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS) and endorsed by the Japanese Society for Information and Systems in…
Descriptors: Conference Papers, Student Journals, Diaries, Self Management
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Sui, Changfu – International Education Studies, 2008
English has become the medium for communication in so many areas, and children are the hope of the future and shoulder the duties to structure the future. Children's English becomes more important and spreads all over the world, especially in recent years. The children's English is not perfect and it exists its own disadvantages, so this paper…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, English Language Learners, English (Second Language), English Instruction
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Windsor, Jennifer; Kohnert, Kathryn; Loxtercamp, Amanda L.; Kan, Pui-Fong – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2008
The performance of 8- to 13-year-old monolingual English-speaking children with language impairment (LI) on seven nonlinguistic tasks was compared with two groups of typically developing children, monolingual English-speaking children, and proficient Spanish-English sequential bilingual children. Group differences were apparent, with a key finding…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Reaction Time, Language Impairments, Monolingualism
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Rose, Richard – International Journal on School Disaffection, 2008
The establishment of positive relationships between home and school has long been recognised as a desirable state which can have a significant bearing upon the success of students both academically and socially. By contrast, when relationships between schools and parents or carers falter, the consequences can be detrimental to all parties and in…
Descriptors: Secondary Schools, Teacher Attitudes, Family Involvement, Partnerships in Education
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