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Schnell, Lauren K.; Vladescu, Jason C.; Kisamore, April N.; DeBar, Ruth M.; Kahng, SungWoo; Marano, Kathleen – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2020
Few studies have evaluated the use of assessment to identify the most efficient instructional practices for individuals with autism spectrum disorder. This is problematic as these individuals often have difficulty acquiring skills, and the procedures that may be efficient with one individual may not be for others. The experimenters conducted…
Descriptors: Cues, Prompting, Children, Autism
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Robinson, Christopher W.; Sloutsky, Vladimir M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Two experiments examined the effects of multimodal presentation and stimulus familiarity on auditory and visual processing. In Experiment 1, 10-month-olds were habituated to either an auditory stimulus, a visual stimulus, or an auditory-visual multimodal stimulus. Processing time was assessed during the habituation phase, and discrimination of…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Familiarity, Infants, Child Psychology
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Hollich, George; Newman, Rochelle S.; Jusczyk, Peter W. – Child Development, 2005
In 4 studies, 7.5-month-olds used synchronized visua-lauditory correlations to separate a target speech stream when a distractor passage was presented at equal loudness. Infants succeeded in a segmentation task (using the head-turn preference procedure with video familiarization) when a video of the talker's face was synchronized with the target…
Descriptors: Infants, Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Stimuli, Visual Stimuli
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Thierry, Karen L.; Goh, Chee Leong; Pipe, Margaret-Ellen; Murray, Janice – Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied, 2005
The effects of rehearsing actions by source (slideshow vs. story) and of test modality (picture vs. verbal) on source monitoring were examined. Seven- to 8-year-old children (N = 30) saw a slideshow event and heard a story about a similar event. One to 2 days later, they recalled the events by source (source recall), recalled the events without…
Descriptors: Young Children, Visual Discrimination, Psychological Studies, Auditory Discrimination
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Bo, Ola O. – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1978
Training programs for auditory and for visual figure-ground perception were constructed and tested with brain-damaged and mentally retarded children. Training groups showed higher gain scores than the control group on both tests, but the effect was significant only for visual training on visual figure-ground perception. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Elementary Education, Mental Retardation, Minimal Brain Dysfunction