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Rubenzer, Ronald L.; Rubenzer, Donna O. – 1984
Designed to accompany an all-day "brain" workshop on neurological aspects of learning, the manual contains charts and illustrations depicting the role and function of the right and left hemispheres. Additional material addresses such topics as physiological evolution of the brain, disharmony between left/right brain functions, comparisons between…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Style, Creativity
Polson, Martha C.; And Others – 1983
A study involved the development and testing of a theoretical framework of cerebral specialization in which each hemisphere of the brain is viewed as an independent information processing system. During the study, four sets of experiments were conducted. These involved behavioral as well as electrophysiological measures. According to the…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes, Lateral Dominance
Federico, Pat-Anthony – 1984
Visual, auditory, and bimodal event-related potentials were recorded from 50 males, and lateral asymmetry indices were derived. Eleven psychometric tests of different cognitive attributes were also administered to them. This area of research has been labeled aptitude-treatment-interaction (ATI). The emphasis of ATI research is on identification of…
Descriptors: Adults, Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Brain, Cerebral Dominance
Struve, Nancy – 1982
The unit provides information on the study of the human brain for students in grades 5-9 with suggestions for extending the lessons for gifted and talented students. Learning activities are offered for ten lessons (sample subtopics in parentheses); introduction to the unit (student pretest and posttest); brain growth; medulla-oblongata-reptilian…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Style, Gifted
Dean, Raymond S.; Gray, Jeffrey W. – 1985
Research has suggested that the two hemispheres of the brain serve specialized functions, with the most recent studies portraying the left hemisphere as processing information in a linear, serial, or sequential manner and the right hemisphere as processing information in a holistic, concrete, or visual mode. Although few systematic studies have…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adults, Brain, Cerebral Dominance
Soares, Louise M.; Soares, Anthony T. – 1982
Brain research has illuminated several areas of the learning process: (1) learning as association; (2) learning as reinforcement; (3) learning as perception; (4) learning as imitation; (5) learning as organization; (6) learning as individual style; and (7) learning as brain activity. The classic conditioning model developed by Pavlov advanced…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style
Motomatsu, Nancy; Patterson, Bobbie – 1981
This bibliography cites references dealing with background material on the functions of the human brain and current research on sex differences in brain development. A list of 10 books published since 1974 is followed by a more extensive annotated bibliography of 29 articles, and a bibliography of 19 reports, complete with ERIC reference numbers…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Children
Grady, Michael P.; Luecke, Emily A. – 1978
The split brain theory states that the right hemishpere of the brain controls intuitive, holistic, and simultaneous operations (such as creative imagining) and the left hemisphere controls linear, sequential, and verbal operations (such as reading and calculating). This booklet summarizes current brain research and examines its implications for…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
Botkin, James W.; And Others – 1980
This report describes some current research which links selected aspects of brain research to selected issues in education. These issue areas include: (1) the relationship between neurophysiology and cognition; (2) the implications of cerebral lateralization for creativity, imagery, and art education; (3) sex differences in brain functioning; (4)…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Federico, Pat-Anthony; And Others – 1983
Fifty Navy recruits were given 11 paper-and-pencil tests of cognitive styles, abilities, and aptitudes. Visual, auditory, and bimodal brain event-related potential (ERP) amplitudes were recorded from each of these subjects. Product-moment and canonical correlational analyses, as well as principal-factor analysis and varimax rotation, were…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Armed Forces, Brain, Cerebral Dominance
Federico, Pat-Anthony – 1983
An irrelevant auditory probe procedure was used to evoke brain event-related potentials (ERPs) in 56 Navy recruits while they learned pulsed radar concepts presented to them in study booklets. A mastery test was administered to assess concept acquisition. The research issue was whether brain ERPs recorded while students are in the process of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adult Education, Brain, Cerebral Dominance
Hutson, Barbara Ann – 1981
This presidential address before the Midwestern Education Research Association describes the chain of evidence that is required to link brain research to classroom practice; describes some of the proposed brain-based curricula and the kinds of evidence presented to support them; and suggests guidelines for evaluating proposals for implementing…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Curriculum Development
Darley, Frederic L., Ed. – 1967
The conference proceedings of scientists specializing in language processes and neurophysiological mechanisms are reported to stimulate a cross-over of interest and research in the central brain phenomena (reception, understanding, retention, integration, formulation, and expression) as they relate to speech and language. Eighteen research reports…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Communication (Thought Transfer), Conference Reports
Grauer, Stuart – 1985
Using current mind/brain research, this paper explores the "hidden curriculum" in the contexts of teaching, learning and supervision. It explains ways in which current research on the nature of learning can fit into today's typical, "clinical" teaching techniques. The importance of respecting individual modes of learning is stressed; further to…
Descriptors: Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Associative Learning, Brain, Cerebral Dominance