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Kirschner, Sebastian; Tomasello, Michael – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
The human capacity to synchronize body movements to an external acoustic beat enables uniquely human behaviors such as music making and dancing. By hypothesis, these first evolved in human cultures as fundamentally social activities. We therefore hypothesized that children would spontaneously synchronize their body movements to an external beat at…
Descriptors: Music, Preschool Children, Social Environment, Dance
Helton, William S.; Hayrynen, Lauren; Schaeffer, David – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Vision researchers have investigated the differences between global and local feature perception. No one has, however, examined the role of global and local feature discrimination in sustained attention tasks. In this experiment participants performed a sustained attention task requiring either global or local letter target discriminations or…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Attention Control, Task Analysis, Human Body
Pijnacker, Judith; Geurts, Bart; van Lambalgen, Michiel; Kan, Cornelis C.; Buitelaar, Jan K.; Hagoort, Peter – Neuropsychologia, 2009
While autism is one of the most intensively researched psychiatric disorders, little is known about reasoning skills of people with autism. The focus of this study was on defeasible inferences, that is inferences that can be revised in the light of new information. We used a behavioral task to investigate (a) conditional reasoning and (b) the…
Descriptors: Autism, Inferences, Thinking Skills, Task Analysis
Pellizzer, Giuseppe; Ba, Maryse Badan; Zanello, Adriano; Merlo, Marco C. G. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Neural resources subserving spatial processing in either egocentric or allocentric reference frames are, at least partly, dissociated. However, it is unclear whether these two types of representations are independent or whether they interact. We investigated this question using a learning transfer paradigm. The experiment and material were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Transfer of Training, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes
Aue, William R.; Arruda, James E.; Kass, Steven J.; Stanny, Claudia J. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Biological rhythms play a prominent role in the modulation of human physiology and behavior. [Smith, K., Valentino, D., & Arruda, J. (2003). "Rhythmic oscillations in the performance of a sustained attention task." "Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology," 25, 561-570] suggested that sustained human performance may systematically…
Descriptors: Physiology, Neuropsychology, Biology, Role
Pimperton, Hannah; Pellicano, Elizabeth; Jeffery, Linda; Rhodes, Gillian – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
DevDevelopmental improvements in face identity recognition ability are widely documented, but the source of children's immaturity in face recognition remains unclear. Differences in the way in which children and adults visually represent faces might underlie immaturities in face recognition. Recent evidence of a face identity aftereffect (FIAE),…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Adults
Boyd, Jeremy K.; Gottschalk, Erin A.; Goldberg, Adele E. – Language Learning, 2009
All natural languages rely on sentence-level form-meaning associations (i.e., linking rules) to encode propositional content about who did what to whom. Although these associations are recognized as foundational in many different theoretical frameworks (Goldberg, 1995, 2006; Lidz, Gleitman, & Gleitman, 2003; Pinker, 1984, 1989) and are--at least…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Task Analysis, Linguistic Input, Language Acquisition
Notley, Anna; Zhou, Peng; Crain, Stephen; Thornton, Rosalind – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2009
Children often produce nonadult responses to sentences with the focus operator only, such as "Only the cat is holding a flag." For example, children often accept this sentence as a description of a situation in which a cat holds a flag and a duck holds both a flag and a balloon. One proposed analysis, by Paterson, Liversedge, Rowland & Filik…
Descriptors: Sentences, Form Classes (Languages), Mandarin Chinese, Child Language
Reybrouck, Mark; Verschaffel, Lieven; Lauwerier, Sofie – British Journal of Music Education, 2009
This article tries to answer two related questions: (i) what do children hear while listening to and making sense of music? and (ii) what kind of representational tools can be used to assess this sense-making? To answer these questions, we set up two empirical studies in which 89 children--8-9-year-olds and 11-12-year-olds (first study)--and 331…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Listening Skills, Task Analysis
Machado, Armando; Malheiro, Maria Teresa; Erlhagen, Wolfram – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2009
In the last decades, researchers have proposed a large number of theoretical models of timing. These models make different assumptions concerning how animals learn to time events and how such learning is represented in memory. However, few studies have examined these different assumptions either empirically or conceptually. For knowledge to…
Descriptors: Intervals, Models, Memory, Animal Behavior
Carter, Erik; O'Rourke, Laura; Sisco, Lynn G.; Pelsue, Danielle – Remedial and Special Education, 2009
The authors queried 313 paraprofessionals working in 77 elementary, middle, and high schools about (a) the contexts within which they support students with disabilities, (b) their knowledge about core competencies in educating these students, (c) the job-related tasks they perform most frequently, (d) their perceived ability to perform these tasks…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Special Education
Moe, Angelica – Learning and Individual Differences, 2009
Expectations about self-competence and difficulty of a task to be undertaken can foster motivation and hence affect engagement, giving rise to individual differences in performance. This effect was examined in a memory task. An increase in recall performance following instructions about high competence was hypothesised; in addition, a modulating…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Recall (Psychology), Self Concept, Difficulty Level
Davis, Tyler; Love, Bradley C.; Maddox, W. Todd – Cognition, 2009
Anticipatory emotions precede behavioral outcomes and provide a means to infer interactions between emotional and cognitive processes. A number of theories hold that anticipatory emotions serve as inputs to the decision process and code the value or risk associated with a stimulus. We argue that current data do not unequivocally support this…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Tests, Decision Making, Attention
Humphreys, Glyn W.; Hodsoll, John; Riddoch, M. Jane – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
The authors present neuropsychological evidence distinguishing binding between form, color, and size (cross-domain binding) and binding between form elements. They contrasted conjunctive search with difficult feature search using control participants and patients with unilateral parietal or fronto/temporal lesions. To rule out effects of task…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Patients, Experimental Psychology, Neurological Impairments
Barth, Hilary; Starr, Ariel; Sullivan, Jessica – Cognitive Development, 2009
Previous studies have suggested that children's learning of the relation between number words and approximate numerosities depends on their verbal counting ability, and that children exhibit no knowledge of mappings between number words and approximate numerical magnitudes for number words outside their productive verbal counting range. In the…
Descriptors: Numbers, Exhibits, Cognitive Mapping, Computation

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