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Cohen-Vogel, Lora; Little, Michael; Jang, Wonkyung; Burchinal, Margaret; Bratsch-Hines, Mary – AERA Open, 2021
Policy observers have expressed concern over whether misalignment between pre-K and K--12 has negative consequences for children. This study considers students' exposure to redundant content across the pre-K and kindergarten years. Specifically, it asks, to what extent are skills and concepts taught in kindergarten redundant with skills and…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Kindergarten, Redundancy, Preschool Curriculum
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Vaillant-Molina, Mariana; Bahrick, Lorraine E. – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Early evidence of social referencing was examined in 5 1/2-month-old infants. Infants were habituated to 2 films of moving toys, one toy eliciting a woman's positive emotional expression and the other eliciting a negative expression under conditions of bimodal (audiovisual) or unimodal visual (silent) speech. It was predicted that intersensory…
Descriptors: Evidence, Infants, Toys, Redundancy
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Jordan, Kerry E.; Baker, Joseph – Developmental Science, 2011
This study presents the first evidence that preschool children perform more accurately in a numerical matching task when given multisensory rather than unisensory information about number. Three- to 5-year-old children learned to play a numerical matching game on a touchscreen computer, which asked them to match a sample numerosity with a…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Young Children, Multisensory Learning, Educational Games
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Bahrick, Lorraine E.; Lickliter, Robert; Castellanos, Irina; Vaillant-Molina, Mariana – Developmental Science, 2010
Prior research has demonstrated intersensory facilitation for perception of amodal properties of events such as tempo and rhythm in early development, supporting predictions of the Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH). Specifically, infants discriminate amodal properties in bimodal, redundant stimulation but not in unimodal, nonredundant…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Prediction, Redundancy, Child Development
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Jordan, Kerry E.; Suanda, Sumarga H.; Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Cognition, 2008
Intersensory redundancy can facilitate animal and human behavior in areas as diverse as rhythm discrimination, signal detection, orienting responses, maternal call learning, and associative learning. In the realm of numerical development, infants show similar sensitivity to numerical differences in both the visual and auditory modalities. Using a…
Descriptors: Infants, Associative Learning, Redundancy, Cognitive Ability
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Bahrick, Lorraine E.; Lickliter, Robert; Flom, Ross – Infancy, 2006
According to the intersensory redundancy hypothesis (IRH), during early development, perception of nonredundantly specified properties is facilitated in unimodal stimulation as compared with bimodal stimulation. Later in development, attention becomes more flexible and infants can detect nonredundantly specified properties in both unimodal and…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Stimulation, Infants, Redundancy
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Flom, Ross; Bahrick, Lorraine E. – Developmental Psychology, 2007
This research examined the developmental course of infants' ability to perceive affect in bimodal (audiovisual) and unimodal (auditory and visual) displays of a woman speaking. According to the intersensory redundancy hypothesis (L. E. Bahrick, R. Lickliter, & R. Flom, 2004), detection of amodal properties is facilitated in multimodal stimulation…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Social Development, Redundancy, Infants
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Kirova, A.; Dachyshyn, D. M.; Hlibka, G.; Holt, K.; Kamal, A.; Kozak, G.; Mattason, P.; Pawlowski, L. – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2004
This collaborative paper explores the process of creating a learning community as a complex learning system in an early childhood graduate course. Reflected here are the course instructor's experiences and those of various students who took the course at different times. This exploration was inspired by the students' (re)created and repeated…
Descriptors: Journal Writing, Transformative Learning, Children, Graduate Students