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Peer reviewedRemington, Robert J. – Journal of Psychology, 1971
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Decision Making, Experiments, Reaction Time
Peer reviewedMorrison, Frederick J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1982
To explore possible age differences, the first experiment assessed speed and maintenance of alertness in 5-year-olds, 8-year-olds, and adults. The second study tested the hypothesis that developmental variation in processing speed observed in some studies was attributable in part to age differences in alerting processes. (MP)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedKirby, N. H.; And Others – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1982
When two nonoperative lights were added to each of the ends of a stimulus display in a four choice reaction time (RT) task, the RTs of mentally retarded and nonretarded young adults Ss were slowed to about the same extent. (Author)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Mental Retardation, Postsecondary Education, Reaction Time
Peer reviewedCourchesne, Eric; And Others – Child Development, 1981
Differences in response of four- to seven-month-old infants to tachistoscopically presented photographs of two human faces suggest infants were able to remember a frequently presented face from trial to trial and discriminate it from a discrepant, infrequently presented face. Findings suggest event-related brain potential (ERP) responses could…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Infant Behavior, Infants, Memory
Peer reviewedSchwantes, Frederick M. – Child Development, 1979
Third- and fifth-grade children and adults were presented with eight-item letter sequences of varied approximation to English in a tachistoscopic single report, cue delay task. (RH)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedDixon, Peter; Di Lollo, Vincent – Cognitive Psychology, 1994
Two experiments involving 12 college students suggest that the visual system codes the temporal relationship between stimuli that occur in close temporal contiguity and that the temporal code determines performance in tasks requiring temporal integration. Potential extension to other visual phenomena is discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Coding, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBhatt, Ramesh S.; Bertin, Evelin – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Two experiments examined whether infants are sensitive to holistic combinations of line junctions in 2-D images that adults use to derive overall 3-D structure. Results suggested that 3-month-olds are sensitive to holistic combinations of line junctions that adults use to derive 3-D information but also selectively attend to these 3-D cues in…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Habituation
Green, Collin; Hummel, John E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Identification of objects in a scene may be influenced by functional relations among those objects. In this study, observers indicated whether a target object matched a label. Each target was presented with a distractor object, and these were sometimes arranged to interact (as if being used together) and sometimes not to interact. When the…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Identification, Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
Lamy, Dominique; Leber, Andrew; Egeth, Howard E – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
Attentional allocation in feature-search mode (W. F. Bacon & H. E. Egeth, 1994) is thought to be solely determined by top-down factors, with no role for stimulus-driven salience. The authors reassessed this conclusion using variants of the spatial cuing and rapid serial visual presentation paradigms developed by C. L. Folk and colleagues (C. L.…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis
Pinto, Yair; Olivers, Christian N. L.; Theeuwes, Jan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Intuitively, dynamic visual stimuli, such as moving objects or flashing lights, attract attention. Visual search tasks have revealed that dynamic targets among static distractors can indeed efficiently guide attention. The present study shows that the reverse case, a static target among dynamic distractors, allows for relatively efficient…
Descriptors: Efficiency, Visual Stimuli, Motion, Attention Control
Nosofsky, Robert M.; Stanton, Roger D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Observers made speeded old-new recognition judgments of color stimuli embedded in a multidimensional similarity space. The paradigm used multiple lists but with the underlying similarity structures repeated across lists, to allow for quantitative modeling of the data at the individual-participant and individual-item levels. Correct rejection…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Multidimensional Scaling, Visual Stimuli, Color
Matsukawa, Junko; Snodgrass, Joan Gay; Doniger, Glen M. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2005
This paper examined conceptual versus perceptual priming in identification of incomplete pictures by using a short-term priming paradigm, in which information that may be useful in identifying a fragmented target is presented just prior to the target's presentation. The target was a picture that slowly and continuously became complete and the…
Descriptors: Identification, Memory, Visual Aids, Models
Wenger, Michael J.; Townsend, James T. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors present a comprehensive consideration of the process characteristics of visual search in contexts that vary in their meaningfulness. The authors frame hypotheses regarding process architecture, stopping rule, capacity, and channel independence, using analytic results and a rigorously specified dynamic system to characterize a set of…
Descriptors: Costs, Visual Stimuli, Visual Learning, Architecture
Merrill, Edward C. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 2005
Visual attention is preattentively drawn to abrupt onsets of stimuli appearing in a visual array. In this experiment, I examined the speed of attentional capture for persons with and without mental retardation. Participants identified target stimuli that were signaled by a valid location cue (20% of the time), an invalid location cue (60% of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Attention, Mental Retardation, Orientation
Green, C. Shawn; Bavelier, Daphne – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors investigated the effect of action gaming on the spatial distribution of attention. The authors used the flanker compatibility effect to separately assess center and peripheral attentional resources in gamers versus nongamers. Gamers exhibited an enhancement in attentional resources compared with nongamers, not only in the periphery but…
Descriptors: Video Games, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Visual Perception

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