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Gugerty, Leo; Brooks, Johnell – Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied, 2004
In 3 experiments, the authors examined how misalignment of egocentric and exocentric reference frames affects cardinal direction judgments. Experiments 1 and 2 demonstrated large differences in the accuracy and speed with which 104 less experienced and 7 experienced navigators made cardinal direction judgments. Reference-frame misalignment was…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Visual Perception, Air Transportation, College Students
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Matthews, Danielle; Lieven, Elena; Theakston, Anna; Tomasello, Michael – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Choosing appropriate referring expressions requires assessing whether a referent is "available" to the addressee either perceptually or through discourse. In Study 1, we found that 3- and 4-year-olds, but not 2-year-olds, chose different referring expressions (noun vs. pronoun) depending on whether their addressee could see the intended referent…
Descriptors: Young Children, Age Differences, Form Classes (Languages), Nouns
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Wiliam, Dylan – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2006
There is an increasing body of evidence that only a minuscule proportion of the sensory data processed by the unconscious mind (capable of processing approximately 11 million bits per second) is referred to the conscious mind (capable of processing approximately 50 bits per second). It is also clear that conscious awareness of stimuli from the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Perception, Brain, Teachers
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Lomas, Dennis – Science & Education, 2004
Modern visualization techniques in science education present a challenge of sorting out the contributions of perception to understanding science. These contributions range over degrees to which perception is influenced by belief (including systematic sets of beliefs which comprise scientific theories) and social setting. This paper proposes a…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Motion, Science Education, Perception
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Levine, Brian – Brain and Cognition, 2004
Autobiographical remembering reflects an advanced state of consciousness that mediates awareness of the self as continuous across time. In naturalistic autobiographical memory, self-aware recollection of temporally and spatially specific episodes and generic factual information (both public and personal) operate in tandem. Evidence from both…
Descriptors: Memory, Aging (Individuals), Anatomy, Neurology
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Herridge, Matt L.; Harrison, David W.; Mollet, Gina A.; Shenal, Brian V. – Brain and Cognition, 2004
The effects of hostility and a cold pressor stressor on the accuracy of facial affect perception were examined in the present experiment. A mechanism whereby physiological arousal level is mediated by systems which also mediate accuracy of an individual's interpretation of affective cues is described. Right-handed participants were classified as…
Descriptors: Perception, Psychological Patterns, Nonverbal Communication, Males
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Jacobsen, Thomas; Horvath, Janos; Schroger, Erich; Lattner, Sonja; Widmann, Andreas; Winkler, Istvan – Brain and Language, 2004
The effects of lexicality on auditory change detection based on auditory sensory memory representations were investigated by presenting oddball sequences of repeatedly presented stimuli, while participants ignored the auditory stimuli. In a cross-linguistic study of Hungarian and German participants, stimulus sequences were composed of words that…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Auditory Perception, Memory, German
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Westermann, Gert; Miranda, Eduardo Reck – Brain and Language, 2004
We present a computational model that learns a coupling between motor parameters and their sensory consequences in vocal production during a babbling phase. Based on the coupling, preferred motor parameters and prototypically perceived sounds develop concurrently. Exposure to an ambient language modifies perception to coincide with the sounds from…
Descriptors: Models, Cognitive Processes, Auditory Perception, Psychomotor Skills
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Wagner, Susan M.; Nusbaum, Howard; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
What type of mental representation underlies the gestures that accompany speech? We used a dual-task paradigm to compare the demands gesturing makes on visuospatial and verbal working memories. Participants in one group remembered a string of letters (verbal working memory group) and those in a second group remembered a visual grid pattern…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Memory, Spatial Ability, Speech Communication
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Schiavetti, Nicholas; Whitehead, Robert L.; Metz, Dale Evan – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2004
This article reviews experiments completed over the past decade at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf and the State University of New York at Geneseo concerning speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC) and synthesizes the empirical evidence concerning the acoustical and perceptual characteristics of speech in SC.…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Manual Communication, Auditory Perception, Hearing Impairments
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Woods, Rebecca J.; Wilcox, Teresa – Cognition, 2006
Recent research indicates that infants first use form and then surface features as the basis for individuating objects. However, very little is known about the underlying basis for infants' differential sensitivity to form than surface features. The present research assessed infants' sensitivity to luminance differences. Like other surface…
Descriptors: Infants, Visual Stimuli, Visual Perception, Visual Learning
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Tsal, Yehoshua; Makovski, Tal – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors devised a prestimulus-probe method to assess the allocation of attention as a function of participants' top-down expectancies concerning distractor and target locations. Participants performed the flanker task, and distractor locations remained fixed. On some trials, instead of the flanker display, either 2 simultaneous dots or a…
Descriptors: Attention, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Performance
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Gross, Charles G. – American Psychologist, 2005
The study of the neural basis of face perception is a major research interest today. This review traces its roots in monkey neuropsychology and neurophysiology beginning with the Kluver-Bucy syndrome and its fractionation and then continuing with lesion and single neuron recording studies of inferior temporal cortex. The context and consequence of…
Descriptors: Neuropsychology, Psychological Studies, Primatology, Physiology
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Alvarez, George A.; Scholl, Brian J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
Real-world situations involve attending to spatially extended objects, often under conditions of motion and high processing load. The present experiments investigated such processing by requiring observers to attentionally track a number of long, moving lines. Concurrently, observers responded to sporadic probes as a measure of the distribution of…
Descriptors: Attention, Experiments, Visual Perception, Experimental Psychology
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Turk-Browne, Nicholas B.; Pratt, Jay – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
When testing between spotlight and activity distribution models of visual attention, D. LaBerge, R. L. Carlson, J. K. Williams, and B. G. Bunney (1997) used an experimental paradigm in which targets are embedded in 3 brief displays. This paradigm, however, may be confounded by retinal eccentricity effects and saccadic eye movements. When the…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Attention, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes
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