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Peer reviewedSharpley, Christopher F.; Sagris, Anastasia – British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 1995
Nine one-hour counseling interviews were examined for the relationship between counselor forward lean and client-perceived rapport. Results indicated that more extreme forward lean was significantly more common during minutes rated as "very high" in rapport. By contrast, less acute forward lean was significantly less frequent during such…
Descriptors: Body Language, Counseling Techniques, Counselors, Nonverbal Communication
Peer reviewedStark, Rachel E.; Heinz, John M. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1996
Twenty-four children (ages 6-10) with language impairment (LI) and 22 without participated in a study of discrimination, identification, and serial ordering of highly dissimilar and similar vowels. Children with LI were less accurate in several tasks and were found to experience auditory perception deficits which led to less robust central…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Perception, Children, Language Impairments
Peer reviewedOppenheim, David; And Others – Child Development, 1997
Interviewed 51 children ages 4 and 5, to obtain narrative representations of mothers--generating Positive, Negative, and Disciplinary representation composites. Found that children who had more Positive and Disciplinary representations and fewer Negative representations had fewer behavior problems and less psychological distress. Older children…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Mothers, Narration, Parent Child Relationship
Peer reviewedDriver, Jon; Baylis, Gordon – Cognitive Psychology, 1996
Eight experiments involving 99 college students examined the role of edge-assignment in a contour matching task. Edge-matching performance was not based solely on a raw description of the edges themselves. Results suggest a pervasive tendency within the visual system to go beyond the edges toward figural shapes. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education, Visual Perception
Peer reviewedBooth, Amy E.; Pinto, Jeannine; Bertenthal, Bennett I. – Developmental Psychology, 2002
Two experiments tested infants' sensitivity to properties of point-light displays of a walker and a runner that were equivalent regarding the phasing of limb movements. Found that 3-, but not 5-month-olds, discriminated these displays. When the symmetrical phase-patterning of the runner display was perturbed by advancing two of its limbs by 25…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Infants, Motion, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedSrinivasan, Ravindra J.; Massaro, Dominic W. – Language and Speech, 2003
Examined the processing of potential auditory and visual cues that differentiate statements from echoic questions. Found that both auditory and visual cues reliably conveyed statement and question intonation, were successfully synthesized, and generalized to other utterances. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, English, Intonation
Peer reviewedSilven, Maarit – Learning and Instruction, 2002
Integrates recent views of early perceptual-cognitive growth with accounts on the development of communication in infancy. Emphasizes supporting evidence for a view that combines innate perceptual and constructive mechanisms with associative memory in explaining how human infants process information. Also considers how the sociocultural…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Communication (Thought Transfer), Infants, Learning
Peer reviewedVitevitch, Michael S. – Language and Speech, 2002
Comparison of the lexical characteristics of 88 auditory misperceptions showed no difference in word-frequency, neighborhood density, and neighborhood frequency between the actual and the perceived utterances. Another comparison showed that slip of the ear tokens had denser neighborhoods and higher neighborhood frequency than words in general.…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Comparative Analysis, Oral Language, Speech Communication
Peer reviewedMullennix, John W.; Bihon, Tressa; Bricklemyer, Jodie; Gaston, Jeremy; Keener, Jessica M. – Language and Speech, 2002
Effects of variation from stimulus to stimulus in emotional tone of voice on speech perception were examined through a series of perceptual experiments. Stimuli were recorded from human speakers who produced utterances in tones of voice designed to convey affective information. Stimuli varying in talker voice and emotional the where then presented…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Oral Language
Peer reviewedRaviv, Amiram; Mashraki-Pedhatzur, Sharon; Raviv, Alona; Erhard, Rachel – School Psychology International, 2002
Investigates the role perception and level of job satisfaction of Israeli school psychologists. Findings showed that most Israeli school psychologists wish to practice as clinicians and prefer to spend most of their time working with children in individual therapy and counseling their parents. However, both job perception and satisfaction were…
Descriptors: Counselor Role, Foreign Countries, Job Satisfaction, Role Perception
Peer reviewedHesketh, E. A.; Allan, M. S.; Harden, R. M.; MacPherson, S. G. – Medical Teacher, 2003
Explores new doctors' perceptions of their educational development during the first year of postgraduate training. Uses semi-structured open interviews with pre-registration house officers and investigates their views on the importance of their experience to the General Medical Council's competencies. (Author/KHR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Medical Education
Peer reviewedSmith, Anne – Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1990
This commentary on EC 232 373 and EC 232 374 suggests that a theory that depends on categorizing events as either stuttering or nonstuttering must fail. It evaluates the merit of the voluntary/involuntary distinction in loss of speech production control, defends research on the nature of stuttering, and proposes additional research and theory.…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Definitions, Evaluation, Handicap Identification
Peer reviewedChristmon, Kenneth – Adolescence, 1990
Investigated factors related to adolescent fathers' (n=43) willingness to take parental responsibility for their children. Found father's parental responsibility was influenced by his own role expectations and self-image. Perceived role expectations of his partner and parents were not related to his willingness to take parental responsibility.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Black Youth, Fathers, Parent Responsibility
Peer reviewedReed, Charlotte M.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1989
Small-set segmental identification experiments were conducted with three deaf-blind subjects who were highly experienced users of the Tadoma method. Systematic variations in the positioning of the hand on the speaker's face for Tadoma produced systematic effects on percent-correct scores, information transfer, and perception of individual…
Descriptors: Deaf Blind, Multiple Disabilities, Speech Communication, Tactile Stimuli
Peer reviewedMcClelland, James L. – Cognitive Psychology, 1991
Mathematical analysis and computer simulation methods are used to show that interactive models of context effects can exhibit classical context effects if there is variability in the input to the network or the network itself. Interactive models represent hypotheses about information-processing dynamics leading to the global asymptotic behaviors…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Context Effect, Equations (Mathematics), Graphs


