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Wagner, Katie; Dobkins, Karen; Barner, David – Cognition, 2013
Most current accounts of color word acquisition propose that the delay between children's first production of color words and adult-like understanding is due to problems abstracting color as a domain of meaning. Here we present evidence against this hypothesis, and show that, from the time children produce color words in a labeling task they use…
Descriptors: Color, Vocabulary Development, Children, Definitions
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Pritchard, Jamie; Rothen, Nicolas; Coolbear, Daniel; Ward, Jamie – Cognition, 2013
People with grapheme-colour synaesthesia have been shown to have enhanced memory on a range of tasks using both stimuli that induce synaesthesia (e.g. words) and, more surprisingly, stimuli that do not (e.g. certain abstract visual stimuli). This study examines the latter by using multi-featured stimuli consisting of shape, colour and location…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Memory, Color, Graphemes
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Webster, Michael A.; Kay, Paul – Cognition, 2012
We examined categorical effects in color appearance in two tasks, which in part differed in the extent to which color naming was explicitly required for the response. In one, we measured the effects of color differences on perceptual grouping for hues that spanned the blue-green boundary, to test whether chromatic differences across the boundary…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Tests, Thinking Skills, Color
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Kerrigan, Iona S.; Adams, Wendy J. – Cognition, 2013
The pattern of shading across an image can provide a rich sense of object shape. Our ability to use shading information is remarkable given the infinite possible combinations of illumination, shape and reflectance that could have produced any given image. Illumination can change dramatically across environments (e.g. indoor vs. outdoor) and times…
Descriptors: Lighting, Geometric Concepts, Time, Geographic Location
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Chambon, Valerian; Haggard, Patrick – Cognition, 2012
Sense of agency refers to the feeling of controlling one's own actions, and, through these actions, events in the outside world. Sense of agency is widely held to involve a retrospective inference based on matching actual effects of an action with its expected effects. We hypothesise a second, prospective aspect of sense of agency, reflecting the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Priming, Adaptive Testing, Inferences
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Du, Feng; Abrams, Richard A. – Cognition, 2012
To avoid sensory overload, people are able to selectively attend to a particular color or direction of motion while ignoring irrelevant stimuli that differ from the desired one. We show here for the first time that it is also possible to selectively attend to a specific line orientation--but with an important caveat: orientations that are…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Motion, Stimuli, Neurology
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Delvenne, Jean-Francois; Holt, Jessica L. – Cognition, 2012
Humans have the ability to attentionally select the most relevant visual information from their extrapersonal world and to retain it in a temporary buffer, known as visual short-term memory (VSTM). Research suggests that at least two non-contiguous items can be selected simultaneously when they are distributed across the two visual hemifields. In…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Infants, Attention, Cognitive Ability
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Denison, Stephanie; Bonawitz, Elizabeth; Gopnik, Alison; Griffiths, Thomas L. – Cognition, 2013
We present a proposal--"The Sampling Hypothesis"--suggesting that the variability in young children's responses may be part of a rational strategy for inductive inference. In particular, we argue that young learners may be randomly sampling from the set of possible hypotheses that explain the observed data, producing different hypotheses with…
Descriptors: Sampling, Probability, Preschool Children, Inferences
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Krebs, Ruth M.; Boehler, Carsten N.; Woldorff, Marty G. – Cognition, 2010
Performance in a behavioral task can be facilitated by associating stimulus properties with reward. In contrast, conflicting information is known to impede task performance. Here we investigated how reward associations influence the within-trial processing of conflicting information using a color-naming Stroop task in which a subset of ink colors…
Descriptors: Semantics, Color, Incentives, Rewards
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Little, Anthony C.; DeBruine, Lisa M.; Jones, Benedict C. – Cognition, 2011
A face appears normal when it approximates the average of a population. Consequently, exposure to faces biases perceptions of subsequently viewed faces such that faces similar to those recently seen are perceived as more normal. Simultaneously inducing such aftereffects in opposite directions for two groups of faces indicates somewhat discrete…
Descriptors: Labeling (of Persons), Color, Human Body, Visual Stimuli
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Oakes, Lisa M.; Hurley, Karinna B.; Ross-Sheehy, Shannon; Luck, Steven J. – Cognition, 2011
To examine the development of visual short-term memory (VSTM) for location, we presented 6- to 12-month-old infants (N = 199) with two side-by-side stimulus streams. In each stream, arrays of colored circles continually appeared, disappeared, and reappeared. In the "changing" stream, the location of one or more items changed in each cycle; in the…
Descriptors: Infants, Short Term Memory, Child Development, Visual Stimuli
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Swallow, Khena M.; Jiang, Yuhong V. – Cognition, 2010
Recent work on event perception suggests that perceptual processing increases when events change. An important question is how such changes influence the way other information is processed, particularly during dual-task performance. In this study, participants monitored a long series of distractor items for an occasional target as they…
Descriptors: Attention, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis
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Mossbridge, Julia A.; Grabowecky, Marcia; Suzuki, Satoru – Cognition, 2011
How do the characteristics of sounds influence the allocation of visual-spatial attention? Natural sounds typically change in frequency. Here we demonstrate that the direction of frequency change guides visual-spatial attention more strongly than the average or ending frequency, and provide evidence suggesting that this cross-modal effect may be…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Spatial Ability, Auditory Stimuli, Associative Learning
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Gonzalez, Michel; Girotto, Vittorio – Cognition, 2011
Young children are able to judge which of two possibilities is more likely to occur when these possibilities are characterized by a simple property, like color ("Is it more likely to draw a red chip or a blue chip?"). Here we ask whether they can do so when the possibilities concern a relation between simple properties ("Is it more likely to draw…
Descriptors: Probability, Prediction, Young Children, Color
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Richter, Tobias; Zwaan, Rolf A. – Cognition, 2009
Two experiments were conducted to investigate whether color representations are routinely activated when color words are processed. Congruency effects of colors and color words were observed in both directions. Lexical decisions on color words were faster when preceding colors matched the color named by the word. Color-discrimination responses…
Descriptors: Color, Objective Tests, Comprehension, Word Recognition
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