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Ibrahim Bilginer; Kerim Koral; Elif Çelebi Öncü; Esra Ünlüer – Online Submission, 2024
The objective of this study is to ascertain the impact of the Gametics Game Program on the visual perception and attention levels of third-grade primary school students. The participants in this study were third-grade students enrolled in primary school in Kocaeli. This study employed a pretest-posttest control group experimental design. The…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Attention, Grade 3, Elementary School Students
Sen, Ayon; Patel, Purav; Rau, Martina A.; Mason, Blake; Nowak, Robert; Rogers, Timothy T.; Zhu, Xiaojin – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2018
In STEM domains, students are expected to acquire domain knowledge from visual representations that they may not yet be able to interpret. Such learning requires perceptual fluency: the ability to intuitively and rapidly see which concepts visuals show and to translate among multiple visuals. Instructional problems that engage students in…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Visual Perception, Data Analysis, Artificial Intelligence
Olsho, Lynne Werner; Gillenwater, Jay M. – 1988
The effects of pure tone stimulation on ongoing motor activity of infants 1 to 4 days of age were studied using a passive, contactless monitoring device. Stimuli were pure tone bursts of 0.5, 1, and 4 kHz presented free field at an approximate level of 70 dB A. Signal trials consisted of 500 ms tone bursts, with rise/fall time equal to 10 ms, and…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Motion, Neonates, Perceptual Development
Huttenlocher, Janellen; And Others – 1991
A study tested the possibility that children 16-24 months old and 6-7 years old can code distance without the use of landmarks. Younger children sat with their mothers at the side of a sandbox and watched the experimenter hide a toy in the sand. After being distracted, the children looked for the toy in the box. Nine trials were used, with toys…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Encoding (Psychology), Perceptual Development
Eimas, Peter D.; And Others – 1993
Previous research has shown that 3- to 4-month-old infants form a global categorical representation for cats that includes female lions, whereas 6- to 7-month-old infants differentiate between cats and lions. Three experiments using familiarization-novelty preference procedures attempted to determine whether the differentiation of a global…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Concept Formation, Infants

Horn, Hilary A.; Myers, Nancy A. – 1977
This paper describes a delayed response experiment which tested children's memory for the location of a hidden object. Eight boys and eight girls at each of two age levels (25 and 37 months) were assigned to each of four experimental conditions and given eight trials in a 9-choice task. On each trial the child saw the object hidden in one of nine…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cues, Memory, Perceptual Development
McGuire, Iris; Turkewitz, Gerald – 1977
The relationship between visual stimulus intensity and directional finger movements was examined in infants of two age groups (16 infants, 10 to 15 weeks old, and 8 infants, 20 to 25 weeks old). Two hypotheses derived from Schneirla's Approach-Withdrawal Theory were examined: (1) that responses of the younger, but not of the older infants, would…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Infant Behavior, Infants, Perceptual Development
Gorrell, Jeffrey – 1983
Two hypotheses were tested in this study: (1) that the elaborateness of children's descriptions would increase with grade level, and (2) that there would be a decrease in peripheral descriptions and an increase in central descriptions with grade level. A total of 211 kindergarten through eighth-grade students were instructed to describe an adult…
Descriptors: Adults, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Individual Characteristics
Panek, Paul E.; Rush, Michael C. – 1985
Older adults are significantly slower than young adults in the naming response in the Stroop Color Word Interference Test. Hypotheses attempting to explain this age-related difference in a perceptual-cognitive task have included orthogenic principle, response-competition, and cautiousness. This study examines whether there are any significant…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests, Older Adults
Todor, John I. – 1977
The author presents an overview of Pascual-Leone's Theory of Constructive Operators, a process-structural theory based upon Piagetian constructs which has evolved to both explain and predict the temporal unfolding of behavior. An application is made of the theory to the demands of a discrete motor task and prediction of (a) the minimal age…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Child Development, Learning Theories, Perceptual Development
Gibson, Eleanor J. – 1977
This paper deals with research on the development of infants' ability to perceive invariant features of things and the relation of objects to both the spatial layout of the infants' environment and to themselves. Basic assumptions regarding the perception of invariance are discussed and a theoretical view of the role of motion in the development…
Descriptors: Infant Behavior, Infants, Motion, Perceptual Development
Banks, Martin S.; Leitner, Edward F. – 1979
This paper reports the major findings and interprets the results of longitudinal and cross-sectional exPeriments concerning the development of visual accommodation in infants 1 to 3 months of age. The stimulus was a high-contrast, random checkerboard which was presented at three different distances from the infants (25, 50 or 100 cm). The physical…
Descriptors: Conference Reports, Eyes, Infants, Neonates
Benson, Katherine A.; Bogartz, Richard S. – 1990
To identify the role of the child's own action in the development of the ability to coordinate perspectives, a spatial localization task was presented to 2 groups of children: 16 children between 18 and 24 months old, and 16 children between 42 and 48 months old. A reward was hidden randomly in one of two identical left-right locations on a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Egocentrism, Perceptual Development
Delicio, Gail C. – 1995
Rudolf Arnheim, former Harvard Professor of the Psychology of Art, developed a theory that the perception of the structure of things in the world is based on simultaneous use of two primary systems: (1) the cosmic system of concentricity and (2) the parochial system of the Cartesian grid. The Cartesin grid imposes order, while the concentric…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Children, Cognitive Measurement, Elementary Education
Aust, Ronald J. – 1987
Meanings given to the term "perception" are discussed in this paper and two categories of perception theories having implications for instructional media research are identified. One category is described as extroverted because it includes theories primarily concerned with characteristics of external stimuli and the influence that the…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Literature Reviews, Media Research, Perception