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Jarrold, Christopher; Gilchrist, Iain D.; Bender, Alison – Developmental Science, 2005
Individuals with autism show relatively strong performance on tasks that require them to identify the constituent parts of a visual stimulus. This is assumed to be the result of a bias towards processing the local elements in a display that follows from a weakened ability to integrate information at the global level. The results of the current…
Descriptors: Autism, Task Analysis, Performance, Visual Stimuli
Healy, Eric W.; Kannabiran, Anand; Bacon, Sid P. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
It has been recently suggested that listeners having a sensorineural hearing impairment (HI) may possess a deficit in their ability to integrate speech information across different frequencies. When presented with a task that required across-frequency integration of speech patterns, listeners with HI performed more poorly than their normal-hearing…
Descriptors: Hearing Impairments, Acoustics, Correlation, Speech
Using Simultaneous Prompting for Teaching Various Discrete Tasks to Students with Mental Retardation
Birkan, Bunyamin – Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 2005
Effectiveness of a simultaneous prompting procedure was evaluated for students with mental retardation at different levels of schools (preschool, primary and secondary grades) using various discrete tasks. Participants included three students whose functioning levels ranged from typically developing to mild and moderate mental disabilities.…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Prompting, Cues, Instructional Effectiveness
Scime, Melinda; Norvilitis, Jill M. – Psychology in the Schools, 2006
The present study examined performance on an arithmetic task of increasing difficulty and a frustrating puzzle task for children with ADHD and comparison children. Emotional competence also was investigated in the two groups. Sixty-four children, 21 previously diagnosed with ADHD, participated. Performance on the arithmetic task was measured in…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Arithmetic, Hyperactivity, Emotional Intelligence
Kureta, Yoichi; Fushimi, Takao; Tatsumi, Itaru F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Speech production studies have shown that the phonological form of a word is made up of phonemic segments in stress-timed languages (e.g., Dutch) and of syllables in syllable timed languages (e.g., Chinese). To clarify the functional unit of mora-timed languages, the authors asked native Japanese speakers to perform an implicit priming task (A. S.…
Descriptors: Vowels, Prior Learning, Phonology, Native Speakers
Allen, Richard J.; Baddeley, Alan D.; Hitch, Graham J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2006
The episodic buffer component of working memory is assumed to play a role in the binding of features into chunks. A series of experiments compared memory for arrays of colors or shapes with memory for bound combinations of these features. Demanding concurrent verbal tasks were used to investigate the role of general attentional processes,…
Descriptors: Memory, Experimental Psychology, Comparative Analysis, Task Analysis
Deruelle, Christine; Rondan, Cecilie; Mancini, Josette; Livet, Marie-Odile – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2006
Configural visual abilities in thirteen children with Williams syndrome (WS) compared to 13 children matched on mental age and 13 children matched on chronological age. Configural abilities were tested through four tasks (1) Silhouette (2) Fragmented (3) Mooney and (4) overlapping figures. In the first three tasks, it was necessary to take into…
Descriptors: Children, Age Differences, Task Analysis, Visual Perception
Mason, Lucia; Scirica, Fabio; Salvi, Laura – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2006
Two dimensions of students' beliefs about meaning construction in reading processes, transmission and transaction beliefs, were studied. According to transmission beliefs, the reader's task is to understand the author's intended meaning, while transaction beliefs assign to the reader the role of active meaning constructor. Students' beliefs were…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes, Grade 7, Grade 11
Fine, Philip; Berry, Anna; Rosner, Burton – Psychology of Music, 2006
This study investigated the role of concurrent musical parts in pitching ability in sight-singing, concentrating on the effects of melodic and harmonic coherence. Twenty-two experienced singers sang their part twice in each of four novel chorales. The chorales contained either original or altered melody and original (tonal) or altered (atonal)…
Descriptors: Music Reading, Singing, Familiarity, Pattern Recognition
Wible, Cynthia G.; Han, S. Duke; Spencer, Magdalena H.; Kubicki, Marek; Niznikiewicz, Margaret H.; Jolesz, Ferenc A.; McCarley, Robert W.; Nestor, Paul – Brain and Language, 2006
Semantic priming refers to a reduction in the reaction time to identify or make a judgment about a stimulus that has been immediately preceded by a semantically related word or picture and is thought to result from a partial overlap in the semantic associates of the two words. A semantic priming lexical decision task using spoken words was…
Descriptors: Semantics, Diagnostic Tests, Reaction Time, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Isiegas, Carolina; Stein, Joel; Hellman, Kevin; Hannenhalli, Sridhar; Abel, Ted; Keeley, Michael B.; Wood, Marcelo A. – Learning & Memory, 2006
Classical fear conditioning requires the recognition of conditioned stimuli (CS) and the association of the CS with an aversive stimulus. We used Affymetrix oligonucleotide microarrays to characterize changes in gene expression compared to naive mice in both the amygdala and the hippocampus 30 min after classical fear conditioning and 30 min after…
Descriptors: Fear, Genetics, Stimuli, Animals
Nicoladis, Elena – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2006
One hypothesis holds that bilingual children's cross-linguistic transfer occurs in spontaneous production when there is structural overlap between the two languages and ambiguity in at least one language (Dopke, 1998; Hulk and Muller, 2000). This study tested whether overlap/ambiguity of adjective-noun strings in English and French predicted…
Descriptors: Speech, Nouns, Transfer of Training, Figurative Language
Salamoura, Angeliki; Williams, John N. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2006
Cross-language (L1-to-L2) syntactic priming is the repetition of utterance structure from one language to another independently of meaning and has motivated models of language-shared representations of L1-L2 equivalent structures (Salamoura and Williams, submitted; Schoonbaert, Hartsuiker and Pickering, submitted). These models assume that the…
Descriptors: Verbs, Syntax, Indo European Languages, Nouns
Pinter, Annamaria – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2006
Tasks with adult learners have been discussed extensively in the language learning literature whilst studies about children using tasks are less widespread. Children's ability to interact on tasks with each other grows steadily with age. This paper reports on the differences observed in the interactions of 10-year-old children and adult learners.…
Descriptors: Adults, English (Second Language), Children, Task Analysis
Graham, Susan A.; Stock, Hayli; Henderson, Annette M. E. – Infancy, 2006
We assessed 19-month-olds' appreciation of the conventional nature of object labels versus desires. Infants played a finding game with an experimenter who stated her intention to find the referent of a novel word (word group), to find an object she wanted (desire group), or simply to look in a box (control group). A 2nd experimenter then…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Infants, Infant Behavior, Child Development