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Toraldo, Alessio; Reverberi, Carlo – Brain and Cognition, 2004
It has been suggested that neglect patients misrepresent the metric spatial relations along the horizontal axis (anisometry). The ''fabric'' of their internal spatial medium would be distorted in such a way that physically equal distances appear relatively shorter on the contralesional side (canonical anisometry). The case of GL, a 76-year-old…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes, Patients, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Mondloch, Catherine J.; Dobson, Kate S.; Parsons, Julie; Maurer, Daphne – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
Children are nearly as sensitive as adults to some cues to facial identity (e.g., differences in the shape of internal features and the external contour), but children are much less sensitive to small differences in the spacing of facial features. To identify factors that contribute to this pattern, we compared 8-year-olds' sensitivity to spacing…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Spatial Ability, Cues
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Landa, Rebecca J.; Goldberg, Melissa C. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2005
This study examined language and executive functions (EF) in high-functioning school-aged individuals with autism and individually matched controls. Relationships between executive, language, and social functioning were also examined. Participants with autism exhibited difficulty on measures of expressive grammar, figurative language, planning,…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Interpersonal Competence, Autism, Grammar
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Colom, Roberto; Rebollo, Irene; Palacios, Antonio; Juan-Espinosa, Manuel; Kyllonen, Patrick C. – Intelligence, 2004
This article analyzes if working memory (WM) is especially important to understand "g." WM comprises the functions of focusing attention, conscious rehearsal, and transformation and mental manipulation of information, while "g" reflects the component variance that is common to all tests of ability. The centrality of WM in individual differences in…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Intelligence, Individual Differences, Cognitive Processes
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Watson, Derrick G.; Maylor, Elizabeth A.; Bruce, Lucy A. M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
The enumeration of small numbers of objects (approximately 4) proceeds rapidly, accurately, and with little effort via a process termed subitization. Four experiments examined whether it was possible to subitize the number of features rather than objects present in a display. Overall, the findings showed that when features are presented randomly…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes, Spatial Ability, Computation
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Flombaum, Jonathan I.; Scholl, Brian J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Meaningful visual experience requires computations that identify objects as the same persisting individuals over time, motion, occlusion, and featural change. This article explores these computations in the tunnel effect: When an object moves behind an occluder, and then an object later emerges following a consistent trajectory, observers…
Descriptors: Computation, Color, Motion, Memory
Shade, Barbara J. – 1984
Specific and unique information processing patterns have been developed by Black Americans as a result of coping with and adapting to a color-conscious society. A review of the literature shows that the major variation in the processing of information which seems to be uniquely Black American occurs in their patterns of perception. Specifically,…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Cultural Differences
Frank, Rita E. – 1987
There is little agreement about how the ability to read route maps initially emerges and about how it should be stimulated by early childhood educators. This study assessed the route map reading behavior of young children and the basic skills that might contribute to that behavior. In individual videotaped sessions, 120 four, five, and six year…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Early Childhood Education, Map Skills
Federico, Pat-Anthony – 1984
To provide converging support that the integration of analog and propositional representational systems is associated with spatial ability, visual, auditory, and bimodal brain event-related potentials were recorded from 50 right-handed Caucasian male recruits at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. Sensory interaction indices were derived for…
Descriptors: Adults, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes, Electroencephalography
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Merriman, William E.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1985
Analyzes sex-related differences between mental rotation rate and spatial ability among adults, 14-year-olds, and 9.5-year-olds to determine the extent to which rotation rate is a correlate of various abilities. (HOD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Age Differences, Children
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Flavell, John H.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1985
In this developmental study of sustained cognitive monitoring, second graders, sixth graders, and college students followed a two-part sequence of spatial directions and then made judgments about reaching the destination intended by direction giver. Cognitive monitoring skills of the type examined appear to be useful in many real-world cognitive…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Kail, Robert; And Others – Intelligence, 1984
Sex differences in speed of solving mental rotation problems were replicated but college men and women were alike in frequency of use of algorithms to solve problems. The most frequent algorithm involved encoding stimuli in working memory, mental rotation of one to orientation of the other, comparison, and response. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Algorithms, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Mathematical Models
Michaelides, Michalis P. – 2002
One hundred and seven 5th-8th graders were tested on spatial rotation multiple-choice items to determine age and gender differences in spatial ability. Thirty-one of them were subsequently interviewed. They were asked to explain their reasoning when solving 4 of the tested items and a problem-solving task. Features of visual and non-visual…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies, Mathematics Education
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O'Connor, N.; Hermelin, B. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 1983
Outlines some problems in using a linear model of information processing for studying learning difficulties in the subnormal and severely subnormal and suggests new paradigms to compensate for these difficulties. (MP)
Descriptors: Autism, Blindness, Cognitive Processes, Deafness
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1980
Four experiments compared three alternative models of linear syllogistic reasoning: (1) linguistic; (2) spatial; and (3) mixed linguistic-spatial. The mixed model, indicating the importance of both verbal and spatial ability, was supported by all four experiments, and for about three-fourths of the undergraduate students studied. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Higher Education
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