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Tseng, Min-chen – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2014
This study investigated the online reading performances and the level of visual fatigue from the perspectives of non-native speaking students (NNSs). Reading on a computer screen is more visually more demanding than reading printed text. Online reading requires frequent saccadic eye movements and imposes continuous focusing and alignment demand.…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Computers, Second Language Learning, Foreign Countries
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Gilden, David; And Others – Cognitive Psychology, 1995
Two experiments with 11 college students demonstrate the influence of their prior visual adaptation to motion on the imagined speed of an imaginary moving object. Results suggest that imagined motion and real vision may engage common neural mechanisms without being functionally equivalent. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Imagination, Inferences
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Crannell, C. W.; Peters, Gregory – Journal of Psychology, 1970
Descriptors: College Students, Cues, Depth Perception, Discrimination Learning
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Craver-Lemley, Catherine; Reeves, Adam – Psychological Review, 1992
The Perky effect, identified in 1910, is the reduction in performance from the no-imagery to the imagery condition. A series of experiments with over 100 undergraduates and graduates shows that the reduction reflects a true reduction in visual sensitivity, not just alteration in criteria for responding or response organization. (SLD)
Descriptors: Attention, College Students, Higher Education, Imagery
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Winer, Gerald A.; Cottrell, Jane E. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1996
Four experiments involving 367 college students and 259 sixth graders demonstrate that children and adults, when asked to represent vision schematically, have a bias to draw arrows pointing away from the eye and toward a visual efferent. The role of this type of representation in learning is discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Freehand Drawing