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Melissa Ballesteros-Mejía; María Angélica Madero – Journal of Visual Literacy, 2024
Images are central to our understanding of and learning about our world. We argue that visual training needs to be improved in the higher education system to enhance the potential of visual thinking to mediate productively our relationship with the context we inhabit. Initiatives from the social sciences and humanities since the end of the twenty…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Visual Learning, Interdisciplinary Approach, Higher Education
Nückles, Matthias – Educational Psychology Review, 2021
In this discussion paper, teaching and learning are characterized as being situated, complex, and reciprocally interactive activities. Accordingly, a teacher's pedagogical actions are always action and reaction at the same time. Irrespective of the reciprocally interactive nature of teaching and learning, educational research has sought to…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Eye Movements, Educational Research, Teacher Education
de Wit, Ellen; Visser-Bochane, Margot I.; Steenbergen, Bert; van Dijk, Pim; van der Schans, Cees P.; Luinge, Margreet R. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2016
Purpose: The purpose of this review article is to describe characteristics of auditory processing disorders (APD) by evaluating the literature in which children with suspected or diagnosed APD were compared with typically developing children and to determine whether APD must be regarded as a deficit specific to the auditory modality or as a…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Literature Reviews, Disabilities
Aslin, Richard N. – Infancy, 2012
Eye-trackers suitable for use with infants are now marketed by several commercial vendors. As eye-trackers become more prevalent in infancy research, there is the potential for users to be unaware of dangers lurking "under the hood" if they assume the eye-tracker introduces no errors in measuring infants' gaze. Moreover, the influx of voluminous…
Descriptors: Infants, Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Inferences
Feng, Gary – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2011
Eye tracking offers a powerful research tool for developmental scientists. In this brief article, the author introduces the methodology and issues associated with its applications in developmental research, beginning with an overview of eye movements and eye-tracking technologies, followed by examples of how it is used to study the developing mind…
Descriptors: Research Tools, Eye Movements, Human Body, Research Methodology
Lind, Sophie E.; Bowler, Dermot M. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2010
It is widely assumed that children with autism have a diminished understanding of the perception-knowledge relationship, as a specific manifestation of a theory of mind (ToM) impairment. However, such a conclusion may not be justified on the basis of previous studies, which have suffered from significant methodological weaknesses. The current…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Perceptual Development, Autism, Research Methodology
Kellman, Philip J.; Garrigan, Patrick; Shipley, Thomas F.; Keane, Brian P. – Psychological Review, 2007
P. J. Kellman, P. Garrigan, & T. F. Shipley presented a theory of 3-D interpolation in object perception. Along with results from many researchers, this work supports an emerging picture of how the visual system connects separate visible fragments to form objects. In his commentary, B. L. Anderson challenges parts of that view, especially the idea…
Descriptors: Researchers, Mathematical Models, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes
McKone, Elinor; Robbins, Rachel – Cognition, 2007
In Robbins, R. & McKone, E. (2006). No face-like processing for object-of-expertise in three behavioural tasks. "Cognition" this issue, we showed face-like holistic/configural processing does not occur for objects-of-expertise on standard paradigms including inversion, part-whole, part-in-configurally-transformed-whole, and the standard composite…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Research Methodology, Cognitive Processes, Neurology
Gauthier, Isabel; Bukach, Cindy – Cognition, 2007
On the basis of a review of the literature and the results of three experiments with dog experts, Robbins and McKone [Robbins, R. A., & McKone, E. (2006). No face-like processing for objects-of-expertise in three behavioural tasks, "Cognition"] argue that there is little or no evidence supporting an expertise account of the differences in…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Cognitive Processes, Research Methodology, Visual Perception
Thornton, Thomas L.; Gilden, David L. – Psychological Review, 2007
A long-standing issue in the study of how people acquire visual information centers around the scheduling and deployment of attentional resources: Is the process serial, or is it parallel? A substantial empirical effort has been dedicated to resolving this issue. However, the results remain largely inconclusive because the methodologies that have…
Descriptors: Data Interpretation, Monte Carlo Methods, Cognitive Processes, Research Methodology
Tzur, Boaz; Frost, Ram – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Applying Bloch's law to visual word recognition research, both exposure duration of the prime and its luminance determine the prime's overall energy, and consequently determine the size of the priming effect. Nevertheless, experimenters using fast-priming paradigms traditionally focus only on the SOA between prime and target to reflect the…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes, Word Recognition, Research Problems
Harcum, E. Rae; Shaw, Mary Ruth – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1974
This study investigates detrimental perceptual effects of adding extraneous stimuli to a tachistoscopic pattern. In two experiments, a general inhibitory effect on reproduction accuracy was found, along with a local effect on elements spatially close to the extraneous stimuli. (Editor)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology, Flow Charts, Psychological Studies

Banks, William P.; Barber, Grayson – Psychological Review, 1977
Reports a series of experiments that give evidence for retention of information about color in very short-term visual memory, commonly termed "iconic memory". (Author)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Color, Experiments, Illustrations
Higgins, Leslie C. – Educational Communication and Technology: A Journal of Theory, Research, and Development, 1980
Four studies showed that a substantial proportion of their subjects, aged four to seven years, responded as if elements "out of sight" in pictures were either nonexistent or imcomplete. Termed "literalism," this mode of responding was related to age but little influenced by training or another form of structured experience.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Pictorial Stimuli, Research Methodology, Tables (Data)
Elias, Lorin J.; Robinson, Brent M. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
People presume that the light source in pictures comes from above, and there is some evidence that this phenomenon also demonstrates lateral biases. When investigators present multiple ambiguous stimuli or visually complex objects, people assume that the source of light is from above, and to the left. However, when single relatively simple stimuli…
Descriptors: Lighting, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Research Methodology