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Showing 9,301 to 9,315 of 25,893 results Save | Export
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Suvedi, Murari; Krueger, David; Shrestha, Anil; Bettinghouse, Dixie – Journal of Environmental Education, 2000
Assesses the knowledge and perceptions of Michigan residents about groundwater in order to develop a comprehensive educational program and provide baseline information to document the program's impact over time. (Author/CCM)
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Groundwater, Perception, Water Resources
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Hedrick, Mark S.; Nabelek, Anna K. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
The current study investigated the influence of the second formant (F2) intensity on vowel labeling along a/u/-/i/continuum. Twenty-two listeners with normal-hearing (NH) sensitivity and 14 listeners with sensorineural hearing impairment (HI) were initially presented 2 stimuli for which the F2 intensity differed by 20 dB. The listeners were asked…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Vowels, Auditory Perception, Hearing Impairments
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Blomert, Leo; Mitterer, Holger; Paffen, Christiaan – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
There is a growing consensus that developmental dyslexia is associated with a phonological-core deficit. One symptom of this phonological deficit is a subtle speech-perception deficit. The auditory basis of this deficit is still hotly debated. If people with dyslexia, however, do not have an auditory deficit and perceive the underlying acoustic…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Mathematical Models, Auditory Perception, Dyslexia
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Munson, Benjamin; Edwards, Jan; Beckman, Mary E. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
A growing body of research has documented effects of phonotactic probability on young children's nonword repetition. This study extends this research in 2 ways. First, it compares nonword repetitions by 40 young children with phonological disorders with those by 40 same-age peers with typical phonological development on a nonword repetition task…
Descriptors: Probability, Young Children, Auditory Perception, Phonology
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Voyer, Daniel; Soraggi, Mariana; Brake, Brandy; Wood, Heather-Dawn – Brain and Cognition, 2006
The present study investigated the possible role of ceiling effects in producing laterality effects of small magnitude in dichotic emotion detection. Twenty two right-handed undergraduate students participated in the present experiment. They were required to detect the presence of a target emotion in the expressions tones of happiness, sadness,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Auditory Perception, Psychological Patterns
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Graf, Markus – Psychological Bulletin, 2006
A basic problem of visual perception is how human beings recognize objects after spatial transformations. Three central classes of findings have to be accounted for: (a) Recognition performance varies systematically with orientation, size, and position; (b) recognition latencies are sequentially additive, suggesting analogue transformation…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Recognition (Psychology), Spatial Ability
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Tuomainen, J.; Andersen, T.S.; Tiippana, K.; Sams, M. – Cognition, 2005
In face-to-face conversation speech is perceived by ear and eye. We studied the prerequisites of audio-visual speech perception by using perceptually ambiguous sine wave replicas of natural speech as auditory stimuli. When the subjects were not aware that the auditory stimuli were speech, they showed only negligible integration of auditory and…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli
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Franklin, A.; Pilling, M.; Davies, I. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
Infants respond categorically to color. However, the nature of infants' categorical responding to color is unclear. The current study investigated two issues. First, is infants' categorical responding more absolute than adults' categorical responding? That is, can infants discriminate two stimuli from the same color category? Second, is color…
Descriptors: Infants, Classification, Eye Movements, Visual Perception
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Mirman, D.; McClelland, J.L.; Holt, L.L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2005
Previous studies have failed to demonstrate lexically induced delays in phoneme recognition, casting doubt on interactive models of speech perception. We present TRACE simulations that explain these failures: previously tested conditions failed to produce lexically induced delay effects because the input was too unambiguous and the control…
Descriptors: Prediction, Phonemes, Investigations, Competition
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Jarmasz, Jerzy; Herdman, Chris M.; Johannsdottir, Kamilla Run – Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied, 2005
Simulator-based research has shown that pilots cognitively tunnel their attention on head-up displays (HUDs). Cognitive tunneling has been linked to object-based visual attention on the assumption that HUD symbology is perceptually grouped into an object that is perceived and attended separately from the external scene. The present research…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes
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Palmisano, Stephen; Gillam, Barbara – Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied, 2005
Experiments examined the accuracy of visual touchdown point perception during oblique descents (1.5?-15?) toward a ground plane consisting of (a) randomly positioned dots, (b) a runway outline, or (c) a grid. Participants judged whether the perceived touchdown point was above or below a probe that appeared at a random position following each…
Descriptors: Optics, Visual Perception, Air Transportation, Vision
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Deutsch, Diana – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
The octave illusion (D. Deutsch, 1974) occurs when 2 tones separated by an octave are alternated repeatedly, such that when the right ear receives the high tone, the left ear receives the low tone, and vice versa. Most subjects in the original study reported hearing a single tone that alternated from ear to ear, whose pitch also alternated from…
Descriptors: Human Body, Auditory Perception, Hearing (Physiology)
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McKone, Elinor – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
A previous finding argues that, for faces, configural (holistic) processing can operate even in the complete absence of part-based contributions to recognition. Here, this result is confirmed using 2 methods. In both, recognition of inverted faces (parts only) was removed altogether (chance identification of faces in the periphery; no perception…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Recognition (Psychology), Cognitive Processes
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Hommel, Bernhard; Li, Karen Z. H.; Li, Shu-Chen – Developmental Psychology, 2004
Gains and losses in visual search were studied across the life span in a representative sample of 298 individuals from 6 to 89 years of age. Participants searched for single-feature and conjunction targets of high or low eccentricity. Search was substantially slowed early and late in life, age gradients were more pronounced in conjunction than in…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aging (Individuals), Visual Perception
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Thompson, Laura A.; Malmberg, Jeanne; Goodell, Neil K.; Boring, Ronald L. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2004
In 2 experiments, a novel experimental paradigm investigated how spatial attention is distributed across a talker's face during auditory-visual speech discourse processing. Dots were superimposed onto several talkers' faces for 17-msec durations on the talker's left side, mouth, right side, and eyebrow area. Participants reported the locations of…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Auditory Perception, Language Research
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