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Bayliss, Andrew P.; Bartlett, Jessica; Naughtin, Claire K.; Kritikos, Ada – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
How information is exchanged between the cognitive mechanisms responsible for gaze perception and social attention is unclear. These systems could be independent; the "gaze cueing" effect could emerge from the activation of a general-purpose attentional mechanism that is ignorant of the social nature of the gaze cue. Alternatively, orienting to…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Cues, Attention, Interpersonal Communication
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Shalev, Lilach; Ben-Simon, Anat; Mevorach, Carmel; Cohen, Yoav; Tsal, Yehoshua – Neuropsychologia, 2011
Among the large variety of attentional tasks that have been used to study sustained attention, the Continuous Performance Task (CPT) is perhaps the most widely used. Despite substantial differences in task characteristics and demands, all CPT paradigms have been referred to as measures of sustained attention. In the present study we introduce a…
Descriptors: Validity, Attention Deficit Disorders, Attention Control, Task Analysis
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Damian, Markus F.; Dorjee, Dusana; Stadthagen-Gonzalez, Hans – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
Although it is relatively well established that access to orthographic codes in production tasks is possible via an autonomous link between meaning and spelling (e.g., Rapp, Benzing, & Caramazza, 1997), the relative contribution of phonology to orthographic access remains unclear. Two experiments demonstrated persistent repetition priming in…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Spelling, Phonology
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Palazova, Marina; Mantwill, Katharina; Sommer, Werner; Schacht, Annekathrin – Neuropsychologia, 2011
Emotional meaning impacts word processing. However, it is unclear, at which functional locus this influence occurs and whether and how it depends on word class. These questions were addressed by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) in a lexical decision task with written adjectives, verbs, and nouns of positive, negative, and neutral…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Verbs, Nouns, Word Recognition
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Ellenbogen, Ravid; Meiran, Nachshon – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
The backward-compatibility effect (BCE) is a major index of parallel processing in dual tasks and is related to the dependency of Task 1 performance on Task 2 response codes (Hommel, 1998). The results of four dual-task experiments showed that a BCE occurs when the stimuli of both tasks are included in the same visual object (Experiments 1 and 2)…
Descriptors: Evidence, Stimuli, Attention, Experimental Psychology
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Bush, Nicole R.; Alkon, Abbey; Obradovic, Jelena; Stamperdahl, Juliet; Boyce, W. Thomas – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Current methods of assessing children's physiological "stress reactivity" may be confounded by psychomotor activity, biasing estimates of the relation between reactivity and health. We examined the joint and independent contributions of psychomotor activity and challenge reactivity during a protocol for 5- and 6-year-old children (N = 338).…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Psychophysiology, Psychomotor Skills, Stress Variables
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Lee, Michael D.; Sarnecka, Barbara W. – Cognition, 2011
Lee and Sarnecka (2010) developed a Bayesian model of young children's behavior on the Give-N test of number knowledge. This paper presents two new extensions of the model, and applies the model to new data. In the first extension, the model is used to evaluate competing theories about the conceptual knowledge underlying children's behavior. One,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Models, Theories, Children
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Galli, Giulia; Otten, Leun J. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
It is unclear how neural correlates of episodic memory retrieval differ depending on the type of material that is retrieved. Here, we used a source memory task to compare electrical brain activity for the recollection of three types of stimulus material. At study, healthy adults judged how well visually presented objects, words, and faces fitted…
Descriptors: Research Design, Visual Stimuli, Infants, Memory
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Hisagi, Miwako; Strange, Winifred – Language and Speech, 2011
American listeners' perception of Japanese contrasts of vowel length (e.g., kiro vs. kiiro), consonant length (e.g., kite vs. kitte) and syllable number/length (e.g., kjoo vs. kijoo) was examined. Stimuli consisted of sentence-length utterances produced by a native Japanese talker; five minimal pairs of each contrast type were included. Questions…
Descriptors: Vowels, Phonology, North American English, Japanese
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Amir, Ofer; Grinfeld, Doreen – Language and Speech, 2011
This study aimed to quantify articulation rate among Hebrew speaking children and adolescents across a wide age range, and to assess whether age-related differences vary according to metric. One hundred and forty children, in seven age groups, participated in this cross-sectional study. All children were recorded during conversation and a picture…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Phonemics, Adolescents, Gender Differences
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Heyman, Gail D.; Itakura, Shoji; Lee, Kang – Social Development, 2011
Children's reasoning about the appropriateness of accepting credit for one's own prosocial behavior was examined. Participants aged 7-11 years old in Japan and the USA (total N = 206) were presented with a series of stories in which a protagonist performs a good deed and is asked about it by another character. Across stories, the protagonist…
Descriptors: Socialization, Prosocial Behavior, Foreign Countries, Social Environment
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Atchley, Ruth Ann; Grimshaw, Gina; Schuster, Jonathan; Gibson, Linzi – Neuropsychologia, 2011
The individual roles played by the cerebral hemispheres during the process of language comprehension have been extensively studied in tasks that require individuals to read text (for review see Jung-Beeman, 2005). However, it is not clear whether or not some aspects of the theorized laterality models of semantic comprehension are a result of the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Figurative Language, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Language Processing
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Boles, David B.; Barth, Joan M. – Brain and Cognition, 2011
In a recent paper, Chiarello, Welcome, Halderman, and Leonard (2009) reported positive correlations between word-related visual field asymmetries and reading performance. They argued that strong word processing lateralization represents a more optimal brain organization for reading acquisition. Their empirical results contrasted sharply with those…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Correlation, Reading Processes, Visual Perception
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Moriya, Hiroki; Nittono, Hiroshi – Neuropsychologia, 2011
In order to determine the processing stage that is responsible for the effect of mood states on the breadth of attentional focus, we recorded event-related potentials from 18 students who performed a flanker task involving adjacent letters. To induce a specific mood state, positive, neutral, or negative affective pictures were presented repeatedly…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Psychological Patterns, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diagnostic Tests
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Tort, Adriano B. L.; Komorowski, Robert; Kopell, Nancy; Eichenbaum, Howard – Learning & Memory, 2011
The association of specific events with the context in which they occur is a fundamental feature of episodic memory. However, the underlying network mechanisms generating what-where associations are poorly understood. Recently we reported that some hippocampal principal neurons develop representations of specific events occurring in particular…
Descriptors: Animals, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Context Effect, Correlation
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