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White, Rebekah C.; Davies, Anne Aimola – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Inattentional blindness is the failure to detect unexpected events when attention is otherwise engaged. Previous research indicates that inattentional blindness increases as perceptual demands intensify. The authors present 6 cuing experiments that manipulated both the perceptual demands of a primary letter-naming task and the expectations of the…
Descriptors: Expectation, Blindness, Children, Attention
Witt, Jessica K.; Proffitt, Dennis R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Perception is influenced by the perceiver's ability to perform intended actions. For example, when people intend to reach with a tool to targets that are just beyond arm's reach, the targets look closer than when they intend to reach without the tool (J. K. Witt, D. R. Proffitt, & W. Epstein, 2005). This is one of several examples demonstrating…
Descriptors: Intention, Experiments, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception
Melville, Wayne; Fazio, Xavier; Bartley, Anthony; Jones, Doug – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2008
In this article, we investigate the relationship between preservice teachers' inquiry experience and their capacity to reflect on the challenges involved in implementing inquiry into classrooms. For data, we draw on the personal narratives of preservice science teachers enrolled in science instruction courses. Preservice teachers with extensive…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers, Personal Narratives, Science Instruction
Clayards, Meghan; Tanenhaus, Michael K.; Aslin, Richard N.; Jacobs, Robert A. – Cognition, 2008
Listeners are exquisitely sensitive to fine-grained acoustic detail within phonetic categories for sounds and words. Here we show that this sensitivity is optimal given the probabilistic nature of speech cues. We manipulated the probability distribution of one probabilistic cue, voice onset time (VOT), which differentiates word initial labial…
Descriptors: Cues, Probability, Auditory Perception, Articulation (Speech)
Zhu, Qin; Bingham, Geoffrey P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
G. P. Bingham, R. C. Schmidt, and L. D. Rosenblum (1989) found that, by hefting objects of different sizes and weights, people could choose the optimal weight in each size for throwing to a maximum distance. In Experiment 1, the authors replicated this result. G. P. Bingham et al. hypothesized that hefting is a smart mechanism that allows objects…
Descriptors: Tactual Perception, Scientific Concepts, Physical Activities, Perceptual Motor Learning
Rakison, David H.; Woodward, Amanda L. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
This special section was motivated by a resurgence in the view that it is impossible to investigate perceptual and cognitive development without considering how it is affected by, and intertwined with, infants' and children's action in the world. This view has long been foundational to the field, yet contemporary investigations of the effects of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Perception, Infants, Experiential Learning
Bogliotti, C.; Serniclaes, W.; Messaoud-Galusi, S.; Sprenger-Charolles, L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2008
Previous studies have shown that children suffering from developmental dyslexia have a deficit in categorical perception of speech sounds. The aim of the current study was to better understand the nature of this categorical perception deficit. In this study, categorical perception skills of children with dyslexia were compared with those of…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Auditory Perception, Control Groups, Reading Achievement
Hermens, Frouke; Luksys, Gediminas; Gerstner, Wulfram; Herzog, Michael H.; Ernst, Udo – Psychological Review, 2008
Visual backward masking is a versatile tool for understanding principles and limitations of visual information processing in the human brain. However, the mechanisms underlying masking are still poorly understood. In the current contribution, the authors show that a structurally simple mathematical model can explain many spatial and temporal…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Visual Perception, Brain, Information Processing
Tillmann, Barbara; Justus, Timothy; Bigand, Emmanuel – Brain and Cognition, 2008
Recent findings suggest the involvement of the cerebellum in perceptual and cognitive tasks. Our study investigated whether cerebellar patients show musical priming based on implicit knowledge of tonal-harmonic music. Participants performed speeded phoneme identification on sung target chords, which were either related or less-related to prime…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Music, Auditory Perception
Turati, Chiara; Bulf, Hermann; Simion, Francesca – Cognition, 2008
The study investigated the origins of the ability to recognize faces despite rotations in depth. Four experiments are reported that tested, using the habituation technique, whether 1-to-3-day-old infants are able to recognize the invariant aspects of a face over changes in viewpoint. Newborns failed to recognize facial perceptual invariances…
Descriptors: Neonates, Profiles, Cognitive Processes, Visual Perception
Farran, Emily K.; Cole, Victoria L. – Brain and Cognition, 2008
Perceptual grouping is a pre-attentive process which serves to group local elements into global wholes, based on shared properties. One effect of perceptual grouping is to distort the ability to estimate the distance between two elements. In this study, biases in distance estimates, caused by four types of perceptual grouping, were measured across…
Descriptors: Perception, Classification, Genetic Disorders, Mental Retardation
Mitterer, Holger; Ernestus, Mirjam – Cognition, 2008
This study reports a shadowing experiment, in which one has to repeat a speech stimulus as fast as possible. We tested claims about a direct link between perception and production based on speech gestures, and obtained two types of counterevidence. First, shadowing is not slowed down by a gestural mismatch between stimulus and response. Second,…
Descriptors: Speech, Auditory Perception, Language Acquisition, Cognitive Processes
Rouhiainen, Leena – Research in Dance Education, 2008
This article introduces a phenomenological understanding of embodiment and discusses it in relation to a somatic approach to teaching dance. The nature of bodily knowledge is scrutinized especially through Maurice Merleau-Ponty's conceptions of perception, subjectivity, and intersubjectivity. The article offers insight into the relationship…
Descriptors: Human Body, Dance Education, Phenomenology, Ethics
Turati, Chiara – Infancy, 2008
Newborns' memory abilities have been shown in a number of studies. Yet little is known about whether many of the factors that are known to affect encoding, storage, and retrieval in older children and adults are also integral to memory processes at birth. Here we tested for the presence at birth of the retroactive interference and repetition…
Descriptors: Neonates, Memory, Repetition, Priming
Polka, Linda; Rvachew, Susan; Molnar, Monika – Infancy, 2008
The role of selective attention in infant phonetic perception was examined using a distraction masker paradigm. We compared perception of /bu/ versus /gu/ in 6- to 8-month-olds using a visual fixation procedure. Infants were habituated to multiple natural productions of 1 syllable type and then presented 4 test trials (old-new-old-new). Perception…
Descriptors: Attention, Infants, Auditory Perception, Speech

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