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Lewkowicz, David J.; Berent, Iris – Child Development, 2009
This study investigated how 4-month-old infants represent sequences: Do they track the statistical relations among specific sequence elements (e.g., AB, BC) or do they encode abstract ordinal positions (i.e., B is second)? Infants were habituated to sequences of 4 moving and sounding elements--3 of the elements varied in their ordinal position…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Infants, Research Methodology, Habituation
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Kiefer, Adam W.; Riley, Michael A.; Shockley, Kevin; Villard, Sebastien; Van Orden, Guy C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Cognitive performance exhibits patterns of trial-to-trial variation that can be described as 1/f or pink noise, as do repeated measures of locomotor performance. Although cognitive and locomotor performances are known to interact when performed concurrently, it is not known whether concurrent performance affects the tasks' pink noise dynamical…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Cognitive Processes, Time Perspective, Intervals
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Yagi, Yoshihiko; Ikoma, Shinobu; Kikuchi, Tadashi – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The "mere exposure effect" refers to the phenomenon where previous exposures to stimuli increase participants' subsequent affective preference for those stimuli. This study explored the effect of selective attention on the mere exposure effect. The experiments manipulated the to-be-attended drawings in the exposure period (either red or green…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes, Stimuli
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Kolinsky, Regine; Lidji, Pascale; Peretz, Isabelle; Besson, Mireille; Morais, Jose – Cognition, 2009
The aim of this study was to determine if two dimensions of song, the phonological part of lyrics and the melodic part of tunes, are processed in an independent or integrated way. In a series of five experiments, musically untrained participants classified bi-syllabic nonwords sung on two-tone melodic intervals. Their response had to be based on…
Descriptors: Intervals, Vowels, Phonology, Music
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Marcovitch, Stuart; Lewkowicz, David J. – Developmental Science, 2009
The ability to perceive sequences is fundamental to cognition. Previous studies have shown that infants can learn visual sequences as early as 2 months of age and it has been suggested that this ability is mediated by sensitivity to conditional probability information. Typically, conditional probability information has covaried with frequency…
Descriptors: Infants, Children, Probability, Sequential Learning
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Lu, Aitao; Hodges, Bert; Zhang, Jijia; Zhang, John X. – Cognition, 2009
Time perception has long been known to be affected by numerical representations. Recent studies further demonstrate that when participants estimate the duration of Arabic numbers, number magnitude, though task-irrelevant, biases duration judgment to produce underestimation for smaller numbers and overestimation for larger numbers. Such effects…
Descriptors: Numbers, Computation, Context Effect, Cognitive Processes
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O'Connell, Laura; Poulin-Dubois, Diane; Demke, Tamara; Guay, Amanda – Infancy, 2009
Adopting a procedure developed with human speakers, we examined infants' ability to follow a nonhuman agent's gaze direction and subsequently to use its gaze to learn new words. When a programmable robot acted as the speaker (Experiment 1), infants followed its gaze toward the word referent whether or not it coincided with their own focus of…
Descriptors: Infants, Robotics, Eye Movements, Vocabulary Development
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Quinn, Paul C.; Tanaka, James W. – Infancy, 2009
Three- to 4-month-old and 6- to 7-month-old infants were administered an infant version of the Face Dimensions Test that has been used with adults (e.g., Bukach, Le Grand, Kaiser, Bub, & Tanaka, 2008). Infants were familiarized with a photograph of a woman's face and then tested with the familiar face paired with a face differing in the (a)…
Descriptors: Photography, Infants, Cognitive Processes, Human Body
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Smith, Michael B. – Language Sciences, 2009
Studies on complementation in English and other languages have traditionally focused on syntactic issues, most notably on the constituent structures of different complement types. As a result, they have neglected the role of meaning in the choice of different complements. This paper investigates the semantics of complementation within the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Grammar, English, Linguistic Theory
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Hamlin, J. Kiley; Newman, George E.; Wynn, Karen – Infancy, 2009
In this study, we tested whether 8-month-old infants could infer an actor's unfulfilled goal, despite some physical information present in the displays being inconsistent with the attempted goal. Infants saw a human hand holding a ring repeatedly approach the top of a plastic cone in an apparent failed attempt to place the ring on the cone. The…
Descriptors: Infants, Inferences, Goal Orientation, Eye Movements
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Marsh, Richard L.; Meeks, J. Thadeus; Cook, Gabriel I.; Clark-Foos, Arlo; Hicks, Jason L.; Brewer, Gene A. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Four experiments were conducted to investigate how the cognitive control of memory retrieval selects particular qualitative characteristics as a consequence of instantiating a retrieval mode for recognition memory. Adapting the memory for foils paradigm from Jacoby, Shimizu, Daniels, and Rhodes (Jacoby, L. L., Shimizu, Y., Daniels, K. A., &…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Recall (Psychology), Memory, Experiments
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Lange, Kathrin – Brain and Cognition, 2009
The present study investigated how auditory processing is modulated by expectations for time and pitch by analyzing reaction times and event-related potentials (ERPs). In two experiments, tone sequences were presented to the participants, who had to discriminate whether the last tone of the sequence contained a short gap or was continuous…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time, Experiments
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Oleksiak, Anna; Postma, Albert; van der Ham, Ineke J. M.; van Wezel, Richard J. A. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
It has been proposed that spatial relations can be encoded in two different ways: categorically, where the relative position of objects can be described in prepositional terms (to the left/right, above/below, etc.) and coordinately, where a precise distance between the objects is assessed. Processing of categorical and coordinate spatial relations…
Descriptors: Information Transfer, Spatial Ability, Time Perspective, Cognitive Processes
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Visch, Valentijn T.; Tan, Ed S. – Cognition, 2009
The reported study follows the footsteps of Heider, and Simmel (1944) [Heider, F., & Simmel, M. (1944). An experimental study of apparent behavior. "American Journal of Psychology," 57, 243-249] and Michotte (1946/1963) [Michotte, A. (1963). "The perception of causality" (T.R. Miles & E. Miles, Trans.). London: Methuen (Original work published…
Descriptors: Comedy, Emotional Response, Films, Classification
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Gruber, Oliver; Melcher, Tobias; Diekhof, Esther K.; Karch, Susanne; Falkai, Peter; Goschke, Thomas – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Background monitoring is a necessary prerequisite to detect unexpected changes in the environment, while being involved in a primary task. Here, we used fMRI to investigate the neural mechanisms that underlie adaptive goal-directed behavior in a cued task switching paradigm during real response conflict or, more generally, when expectations on the…
Descriptors: Brain, Change, Conflict, Cognitive Processes
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