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Peer reviewedLebron-Rodriguez, Delia Ester; Pasnak, Robert – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1977
This study attempted to determine whether a combination of seriation and classification training would produce more general intellectual gains. (Author/SB)
Descriptors: Blindness, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedO'Connor, N.; Hermelin, B. M. – British Journal of Psychology, 1972
Results showed that both groups of children used a sequential rather than a logical order as a guide in answering questions, and that there was no indication that sighted children used a strategy of spatial coding. (Authors)
Descriptors: Blindness, Comparative Analysis, Elementary School Students, Handicapped Children
Laughery, Kenneth R.; Spector, Amos – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1972
Descriptors: Cluster Grouping, Cognitive Processes, Memory, Pattern Recognition
Peer reviewedMason, Mildred – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1982
Three experiments report additional evidence that it is a mistake to account for all interletter effects solely in terms of sensory variables. These experiments attest to the importance of structural variables such as retina location, array size, and ordinal position. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Processes, Eye Fixations, Higher Education
Peer reviewedKatz, Robert B.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Examined the hypothesis that good and poor readers would differ in their ability to order stimuli that can be easily recoded as words and stored in phonetic form, but not in their ability to order nonlinguistic stimuli that do not lend themselves to phonetic recoding in short-term memory. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Elementary Education, Pattern Recognition
Peer reviewedJohnson, Martin L. – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1977
First- and second-grade students given instruction on length performed better on tests of seriation than students not given this instruction. (SD)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics, Instruction
Peer reviewedNishiyama, Kunio – Journal of East Asian Linguistics, 1998
Argues for a fundamental structural similarity between serial verb constructions, widely known from Kwa languages, and v-v compounds in Japanese. A major theoretical implication of the analysis is that it supports an analysis of clausal structure where the external argument is not included in the immediate projection of a verb but is introduced by…
Descriptors: African Languages, Contrastive Linguistics, Foreign Countries, Grammar
Smith, Lorraine A.; Sterling, Donna R.; Moyer-Packenham, Patricia S. – Science and Children, 2006
Linear measurement is more than just learning how to use a ruler. In the early grades, measurement activities develop students' understanding of the properties of objects as well as what it means to measure objects. Hands-on activities can enable students to explore such measurable properties as height and length, and direct comparisons of various…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Measurement, Grade 1, Grade 2
Botvinick, Matthew M.; Plaut, David C. – Psychological Review, 2006
Despite a century of research, the mechanisms underlying short-term or working memory for serial order remain uncertain. Recent theoretical models have converged on a particular account, based on transient associations between independent item and context representations. In the present article, the authors present an alternative model, according…
Descriptors: Models, Short Term Memory, Serial Ordering, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Stewart, Neil; Brown, Gordon D. A.; Chater, Nick – Psychological Review, 2005
In unidimensional absolute identification tasks, participants identify stimuli that vary along a single dimension. Performance is surprisingly poor compared with discrimination of the same stimuli. Existing models assume that identification is achieved using long-term representations of absolute magnitudes. The authors propose an alternative…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Identification, Serial Ordering, Task Analysis
Inhoff, Albrecht W.; Radach, Ralph; Eiter, Brianna – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
A. Pollatsek, E. D. Reichle, and K. Rayner argue that the critical findings in A. W. Inhoff, B. M. Eiter, and R. Radach are in general agreement with core assumptions of sequential attention shift models if additional assumptions and facts are considered. The current authors critically discuss the hypothesized time line of processing and indicate…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Word Recognition, Verbal Stimuli, Neurolinguistics
Lawton, Joseph T.; Ershler, Joan – 1980
Children aged 2-1/2 to 3-1/2 years in three preschool programs were given a test battery consisting of classification, relations, and conservation tasks. One program (Ausubelian) was formal and two programs (Piagetian and Tradition) were informal. Posttest data for the first year of a three-year longitudinal study indicated significantly superior…
Descriptors: Classification, Comparative Analysis, Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept)
Ehri, Linnea C. – 1973
In order to verify claims made by Genevan researchers that linguistic production but not comprehension capabilities distinguish seriators from nonseriators, three tasks were administered to children between the ages of four and eight. Subjects were asked to arrange in order objects varying in size, to describe how the objects differed from each…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Children, Developmental Tasks
Friedman, William J. – 1977
This study examines problems related to (1) the development of children's understanding of temporal cycles, and (2) the relationship between cyclic concepts and cognitive development. Piagetian tests of classification and seriation and a variety of specially designed cyclic tasks were administered to 62 children, ranging in age from 4 to 10 years.…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Elementary School Students
Krueger, Lester E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1972
The sentence-picture comparison task requires Ss to decide, as quickly as possible, whether a sentence correctly describes a feature of a picture. (Author)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Information Processing, Negative Forms (Language), Pictorial Stimuli

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