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Huttenlocher, Janellen; And Others – Cognitive Psychology, 1994
Six experiments involving 262 children (as young as 16 months and as old as fifth grade) indicate that the basic framework for coding location is present early in life and that later development consists of an increasing ability to impose organization on a broad range of bounded spaces. (SLD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Coding, Cognitive Processes
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Potter, L. E. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1995
This article reviews developmental and neuropsychological evidence of differences between modes of processing small-scale and large-scale spatial information, and discusses implications for teaching students with visual impairments. Understanding of developmental processes is felt to be the key to diagnosing and treating orientation and mobility…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Psychology, Educational Diagnosis
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West, Thomas G. – Annals of Dyslexia, 1992
This paper proposes that those traits which handicap visually oriented dyslexics in a verbally oriented educational system may confer advantages in new fields which rely on visual methods of analysis, especially those in computer applications. It is suggested that such traits also characterized Albert Einstein, Michael Faraday, James Maxwell, and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Computer Oriented Programs, Dyslexia
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Swanson, H. Lee – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1993
Investigated how working memory differences between learning-disabled and nondisabled children reflect a specific or generalized deficit and whether limitations in enhancement of learning-disabled student's working memory performance are attributable to process or storage functions. Results suggest that learning-disabled suffer generalized working…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
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Salthouse, Timothy A.; And Others – Intelligence, 1990
Three hypotheses accounting for individual differences in spatial visualization ability were investigated in 2 experiments with 142 male undergraduates at Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta). Support was found for the preservation-under-transformation hypothesis, suggesting that effectiveness of storage during concurrent information…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Etiology
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Mathewson, James H. – Science Education, 1999
Reviews the fundamental role of imagery in science and technology and our current knowledge of visual-spatial cognition. Results suggest that individual differences in perspectives should not be ignored. Contains 126 references. (DDR)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Processes, Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education
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Edwards, Rachel; Ungar, Simon; Blades, Mark – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1998
This study evaluated descriptions, either from memory or by using a map (print or tactile), of 12 visually impaired and 12 sighted elementary grade children of two routes around their schools. Descriptions from maps were generally poorer than those from memory. Qualitative differences were also found between descriptions of visually impaired and…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Maps
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Hermer-Vazques, Linda; Moffet, Anne; Munkholm, Paul – Cognition, 2001
Three experiments explored change toward more flexible reliance on combinations of spatial and nonspatial landmark information to reorient oneself. Identified 5-7 years as age for this developmental change. Results suggest that language production skills play a causal role in allowing humans to construct novel representations rapidly, which can…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
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Cochran, Jane M. A.; Davis, Alyson – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2005
Previous research by Lidster and Bremner (1999) on young children's ability to coordinate two dimensions has shown that performance on construction tasks (in which children have to give the correct coordinates for a point in space that is already known) is superior to performance on interpretation tasks (in which children are given a pair of…
Descriptors: College Students, Sequential Learning, Young Children, Task Analysis
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Jansen-Osmann, Petra; Wiedenbauer, Gunnar – Environment and Behavior, 2004
Three experiments investigated the route-angularity effect, which is demonstrated when a greater number of turns along a route increases the estimated length. So far, a route-angularity effect has not been demonstrated in school-age children. Because of the lack of a developmental theory, this finding could only be explained by a minor control of…
Descriptors: Computation, Geographic Location, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries
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Galera, Cesar; von Grunau, Michael; Panagopoulos, Afroditi – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2005
In two experiments we investigated the automatic adjusting of the attentional focus to simple geometric shapes. The participants performed a visual search task with four stimuli (the target and three distractors) presented always around the fixation point, inside an outlined frame not related to the search task. A cue informed the subject only…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Geometric Concepts, Cognitive Processes, Experiments
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Ragozzino, Michael E.; Choi, Daniel – Learning & Memory, 2004
The present studies explored the role of the medial striatum in learning when task contingencies change. Experiment 1 examined whether the medial striatum is involved in place reversal learning. Testing occurred in a modified cross-maze across two consecutive sessions. Injections of the local anesthetic, bupivacaine, into the medial striatum, did…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Learning, Biochemistry, Neurological Impairments, Behavioral Science Research
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Caron, M.-J.; Mottron, L.; Berthiaume, C.; Dawson, M. – Brain, 2006
In order to explain the cognitive and cerebral mechanisms responsible for the visuospatial peak in autism, and to document its specificity to this condition, a group of eight high-functioning individuals with autism and a visuospatial peak (HFA-P) performed a modified block-design task (BDT; subtest from Wechsler scales) at various levels of…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Gifted, Memory
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Brooks, Brian E.; Cooper, Eric E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Three divided visual field experiments tested current hypotheses about the types of visual shape representation tasks that recruit the cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying face recognition. Experiment 1 found a right hemisphere advantage for subordinate but not basic-level face recognition. Experiment 2 found a right hemisphere advantage for…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Animals, Visual Perception, Human Body
Brekke, Stewart E. – 1994
This paper reviews recent literature in order to identify factors affecting student performance in introductory high school and college physics courses. An important factor identified was formation of cognitive structures such as formation of problem solving schemata. It was concluded that Piagetian concepts such as concrete and abstract reasoning…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Processes, High Schools, Higher Education
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