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Hickey, Clayton; Di Lollo, Vincent; McDonald, John J. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Attentional selection of a target presented among distractors can be indexed with an event-related potential (ERP) component known as the N2pc. Theoretical interpretation of the N2pc has suggested that it reflects a fundamental mechanism of attention that shelters the cortical representation of targets by suppressing neural activity stemming from…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Diagnostic Tests, Attention, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Verkoeijen, Peter; Tabbers, Huib – Educational Psychology, 2009
In the present study, we explored why interspersing quantitative details through a multimedia lesson detracts from learners' qualitative understanding. Three experimental conditions were created. In each, participants had to study a qualitative text on the formation, propagation, and dispersion of ocean waves. In the concise condition no…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Adults, Memory
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Sawaki, Risa; Katayama, Jun'ichi – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Attentional capture for distractors is enhanced by increasing the difficulty of discrimination between the standard and the target in the three-stimulus oddball paradigm. In this study, we investigated the cognitive mechanism of this modulation of attentional capture. Event-related brain potentials were recorded from participants while they…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Attention, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Tests
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Panizza, Daniele; Chierchia, Gennaro; Clifton, Charles, Jr. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
There has been much debate, in both the linguistics and the psycholinguistics literature, concerning numbers and the interpretation of number denoting determiners ("numerals"). Such debate concerns, in particular, the nature and distribution of upper-bounded ("exact") interpretations vs. lower-bounded ("at-least") construals. In the present paper…
Descriptors: Silent Reading, Numbers, Experiments, Eye Movements
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Bonnefond, Mathilde; Van der Henst, Jean-Baptiste – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Conditional reasoning studies typically involve presenting a major conditional premise ("If P then Q"), a minor premise (P) and a conclusion (Q). We describe how most fMRI studies investigate reasoning and point out that these studies neglect to take into consideration the temporal sequence of cognitive steps generated by the interaction of the…
Descriptors: Inferences, Diagnostic Tests, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
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Ozdemir, Omer Faruk – International Journal of Science Education, 2009
Two independent lines of research--mental simulations and thought experiments--provide strong arguments about the importance of perceptual modalities for the instructional practices in science education. By situating the use of mental simulations in the framework of thought experiments, this study investigated the nature and the role of mental…
Descriptors: Visualization, Cognitive Processes, Experiments, Graduates
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Luo, Yuyan; Johnson, Susan C. – Developmental Science, 2009
The present research examined whether infants as young as 6 months of age would consider what objects a human agent could perceive when interpreting her actions on the objects. In two experiments, the infants took the agent's actions of repeatedly reaching for and grasping one of two possible objects as suggesting her preference for that object…
Descriptors: Infants, Experiments, Visual Perception, Action Research
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Cassia, Viola Macchi; Picozzi, Marta; Kuefner, Dana; Bricolo, Emanuela; Turati, Chiara – Developmental Science, 2009
The current study compared the development of holistic processing for faces and non-face visual objects by testing for the composite effect for faces and frontal images of cars in 3- to 5-year-old children and adults in a series of four experiments using a two-alternative forced-choice recognition task. Results showed that a composite effect for…
Descriptors: Young Children, Cognitive Processes, Motor Vehicles, Human Body
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Sobel, David M.; Buchanan, David W. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Previous research has shown that preschoolers extend labels and internal properties of objects based on those objects' causal properties, even when the causal properties conflict with the objects' perceptual appearance [Nazzi, T., & Gopnik, A. (2000). "A shift in children's use of perceptual and causal cues to categorization." "Developmental…
Descriptors: Cues, Conflict, Preschool Children, Classification
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Langer, Philip – Educational Psychology Review, 2009
This paper attempts to explore the diminishing contributions of psychology in teacher preparation programs. Using situated learning as a basis for discussion, I have argued that a student may take a course in educational psychology and then subsequently discover that subsequent preparation may ignore those psychological "caveats" regarding the…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Transfer of Training, Group Dynamics, Cognitive Processes
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Chambliss, J. J. – Educational Theory, 2009
In this review essay J.J. Chambliss assesses the current state of the field of philosophy of education through analysis of four recent edited compilations: Randall Curren's "A Companion to Philosophy of Education"; Nigel Blake, Paul Smeyers, Richard Smith, and Paul Standish's "The Blackwell Guide to Philosophy of Education"; Wilfred Carr's "The…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Book Reviews, Feminism, Definitions
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Scott-Phillips, Thomas C.; Kirby, Simon; Ritchie, Graham R. S. – Cognition, 2009
A unique hallmark of human language is that it uses signals that are both learnt and symbolic. The emergence of such signals was therefore a defining event in human cognitive evolution, yet very little is known about how such a process occurs. Previous work provides some insights on how meaning can become attached to form, but a more foundational…
Descriptors: Experiments, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Games
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Qiao, Xiaomei; Forster, Kenneth; Witzel, Naoko – Cognition, 2009
Bowers, Davis, and Hanley (Bowers, J. S., Davis, C. J., & Hanley, D. A. (2005). "Interfering neighbours: The impact of novel word learning on the identification of visually similar words." "Cognition," 97(3), B45-B54) reported that if participants were trained to type nonwords such as "banara", subsequent semantic categorization responses to…
Descriptors: Semantics, Competition, Word Recognition, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Language and Education, 2009
Educators generally are concerned with testing what learners know by means of written tests, as if knowledge was some intrapsychological thing or state that could be translated and externalized into some interpsychologically available inscription that is a more-or-less accurate approximation of what the person knows. In such endeavors, language is…
Descriptors: Speech, Oral Language, Linguistic Theory, Cognitive Processes
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Keestra, Machiel; Cowley, Stephen J. – Language Sciences, 2009
Neuroscience offers more than new empirical evidence about the details of cognitive functions such as language, perception and action. Since it also shows many functions to be highly distributed, interconnected and dependent on mechanisms at different levels of processing, it challenges concepts that are traditionally used to describe these…
Descriptors: Research Needs, Disabilities, Language Skills, Cognitive Processes
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