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Emma C. Holtz; Vanessa G. Lee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Increasing evidence has shown that implicit learning shapes visuospatial attention, yet how such learning interacts with top-down, goal-driven attention remains unclear. This study investigated the relationship between task goals and selection history using a location probability learning (LPL) paradigm. We tested whether a top-down spatial cue…
Descriptors: College Students, Spatial Ability, Goal Orientation, Visual Learning
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Alejandro Grosso Laguna; Favio Shifres – Research in Dance Education, 2024
The present study addresses the impact of multimodal complexity in the transmission of a dance exercise. This study examined what kind of temporal correspondence favors the clarity of a teaching instruction in the context of a dance class. From an autoethnographic perspective, we describe a real learning situation in which a teacher marks (bodily…
Descriptors: Dance Education, College Students, Nonverbal Communication, Verbal Communication
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Ploetzner, Rolf; Berney, Sandra; Bétrancourt, Mireille – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2021
The results of three meta-analyses show that the effectiveness of learning from animations, when compared to learning from static pictures, is rather limited. A recent re-analysis of one of these meta-analyses, however, supports that learning from animations is considerably more effective than learning from static pictures if the specifics of the…
Descriptors: Animation, Pictorial Stimuli, Instructional Effectiveness, Performance Factors
Barger, J. Bradley – ProQuest LLC, 2016
All branches of anatomy (gross anatomy, histology, neuroanatomy, and embryology) involve significant amounts of visual identification. Understanding the spatial relationship and visual representations of anatomical structures forms the basis for much of anatomy education, particularly in laboratory courses. Students in these courses frequently…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Anatomy, Study Habits, Medical Students
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Baylina Ferré, Mireia; Rodó de Zárate, Maria – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2016
Intersectionality is a complex concept to deal with when doing research but also when teaching the interrelationships between space and social relations. Here we present "Relief Maps" as a visual tool for teaching intersectionality and its spatial dimension in higher education courses. "Relief Maps" are a model developed for…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Visual Learning, Teaching Methods, Geography Instruction
Lee, Hyangsook – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The purpose of the study was to compare 2D and 3D visual presentation styles, both still frame and animation, on subjects' brain activity measured by the amplitude of EEG alpha wave and on their recall to see if alpha power and recall differ significantly by depth and movement of visual presentation style and by spatial intelligence. In addition,…
Descriptors: Brain, Spatial Ability, Intelligence, Comparative Analysis
Choi, Jean; Sardar, Shaila – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2011
Although specific cognitive abilities, cognitive style, and learning preferences are assumed to be inter-related, the empirical evidence supporting this assumption is mixed. Cognitive style refers to how individuals represent information, and learning preference refers to how individuals prefer the presentation of information (Mayer & Massa,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Style
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Carpenter, Shana K.; Pashler, Harold – Online Submission, 2007
Psychological research shows that learning can be powerfully enhanced through testing, but this finding has so far been confined to memory tasks requiring verbal responses. We explored whether testing can enhance learning of visuospatial information in maps. Fifty subjects each studied 2 maps, one through conventional study, and the other through…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Testing, Maps, Nonverbal Learning