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Wheeler, Kateri Lynn – Online Submission, 2013
Synesthesia is a neurological disorder that has to do with the "union of the senses." The literature reveals that students with synesthesia are affected with various degrees of severity. Students may hear a bell ring. Their brain is wired to take that sound and interpret it differently, through color, texture, taste, sound or temperature among…
Descriptors: Sensory Experience, Sensory Integration, Neurological Organization, Holistic Approach
Vallett, David Bruce – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This study examined the relationships among visuospatial ability, motivation to learn science, and learner conceptions of force across commonly measured demographics with university undergraduates with the aim of examining the support for an evolved sense of force and motion. Demographic variables of interest included age, ethnicity, and gender,…
Descriptors: Science Education, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Learning Motivation
Research and Training Center for Pathways to Positive Futures, 2013
This information brief provides an example of how one locally-initiated program has implemented the Peer Support Specialist role for youth and young adults with serious mental health conditions. The brief covers aspects of training, coaching, supervision, role definition and financing; and describes challenges and solutions.
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Youth Programs, Empowerment, Young Adults
Taylor, Amy R.; Jones, M. Gail – Research in Science Education, 2013
The "National Science Education Standards" emphasize teaching unifying concepts and processes such as basic functions of living organisms, the living environment, and scale (NRC 2011). Scale includes understanding that different characteristics, properties, or relationships within a system might change as its dimensions are increased or decreased…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking, Spatial Ability, Science Teachers
Ferguson, Christopher J.; Garza, Adolfo; Jerabeck, Jessica; Ramos, Raul; Galindo, Mariza – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2013
The United States Supreme Court's recent decision relating to violent video games revealed divisions within the scientific community about the potential for negative effects of such games as well as the need for more, higher quality research. Scholars also have debated the potential for violent games to have positive effects such as on…
Descriptors: Grade Point Average, Outcome Measures, Video Games, Effect Size
Olsen, Kirk N.; Stevens, Catherine J.; Tardieu, Julien – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Three experiments investigate psychological, methodological, and domain-specific characteristics of loudness change in response to sounds that continuously increase in intensity (up-ramps), relative to sounds that decrease (down-ramps). Timbre (vowel, violin), layer (monotone, chord), and duration (1.8 s, 3.6 s) were manipulated in Experiment 1.…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Change, Auditory Perception, Music
Stalinski, Stephanie M.; Schellenberg, E. Glenn – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Musical melodies are recognized on the basis of pitch and temporal relations between consecutive tones. Although some previous evidence (e.g., Saffran & Griepentrog, 2001) points to an absolute-to-relative developmental shift in listeners' perception of pitch, other evidence (e.g., Plantinga & Trainor, 2005; Schellenberg & Trehub,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Individual Development, Music, Auditory Perception
Kahan, Todd A.; Enns, James T. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Five experiments demonstrate that when dots appear beside a briefly presented target object, and persist on view longer than the target, the flanked object is perceptually altered by the dots. Three methods are used to explore this "object trimming effect". Experiments 1-3 assess participants' conscious reports of trimmed digits, Experiment 4 uses…
Descriptors: Repetition, Priming, Visual Perception, Geometric Concepts
Graham, Kim S.; Barense, Morgan D.; Lee, Andy C. H. – Neuropsychologia, 2010
Studies in rats and non-human primates suggest that medial temporal lobe (MTL) structures play a role in perceptual processing, with the hippocampus necessary for spatial discrimination, and the perirhinal cortex for object discrimination. Until recently, there was little convergent evidence for analogous functional specialisation in humans, or…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Perception, Memory, Neurological Organization
Rodd, Melissa – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2010
A well-documented experience of students of elementary Euclidean geometry is "seeing" a geometric result and being sure about its truth; this sort of experience gives rise to the notion of geometrical visualisation that is developed here. In this essay a philosophical argument for the epistemic potential of geometrical visualisation is reviewed,…
Descriptors: Geometry, Visualization, Epistemology, Mathematics Education
Konishi, Masakazu – Brain and Language, 2010
Central nervous networks, be they a part of the human brain or a group of neurons in a snail, may be designed to produce distinct patterns of movement. Central pattern generators can account for the development and production of normal vocal signals without auditory feedback in non-songbirds. Songbirds need auditory feedback to develop and…
Descriptors: Animals, Auditory Perception, Feedback (Response), Acoustics
Solomyak, Olla; Marantz, Alec – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
We employ a single-trial correlational MEG analysis technique to investigate early processing in the visual recognition of morphologically complex words. Three classes of affixed words were presented in a lexical decision task: free stems (e.g., taxable), bound roots (e.g., tolerable), and unique root words (e.g., vulnerable, the root of which…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Word Recognition, Visual Perception, Brain
Da Pos, Osvaldo; Baratella, Linda; Sperandio, Gabriele – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2010
The present study explored the perceptual process of integration of luminance information in the production of the gray color of an object placed in an environment viewed from a window. The mean luminance of the object was varied for each mean luminance of the environment. Participants matched the gray color of the object with that of Munsell…
Descriptors: Light, Visual Perception, Color, College Students
Keri, Szabolcs; Benedek, Gyorgy – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Skottun and Skoyles (2009) recently presented a comment on Vernier acuity and magnocellular dysfunctions in fragile X premutation carriers (Keri & Benedek, 2009). The authors concluded that our finding that the magnocellular deficit, as revealed by luminance-contrast sensitivity measurements, is associated with impaired Vernier acuity for…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Genetics, Visual Perception, Cytology
Caruso, Eugene M.; Waytz, Adam; Epley, Nicholas – Cognition, 2010
People can appear inconsistent in their intuitions about sequences of repeated events. Sometimes people believe such sequences will continue (the "hot hand"), and sometimes people believe they will reverse (the "gambler's fallacy"). These contradictory intuitions can be partly explained by considering the perceived intentionality of the agent…
Descriptors: Prediction, Intuition, Beliefs, Intention

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