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Showing 1 to 15 of 64 results Save | Export
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Hannes M. Körner; Franz Faul; Antje Nuthmann – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
Observers' memory for a person's appearance can be compromised by the presence of a weapon, a phenomenon known as the weapon-focus effect (WFE). According to the unusual-item hypothesis, attention shifts from the perpetrator to the weapon because a weapon is an unusual object in many contexts. To test this assumption, we monitored participants'…
Descriptors: Weapons, Eye Movements, Observation, Familiarity
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Shuting Li; Keitaro Machida; Emma L. Burrows; Katherine A. Johnson – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
Research is equivocal on whether attention orienting is atypical in autism. This study investigated two types of attention orienting in autistic people and accounted for the potential confounders of alerting level, co-occurring symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and anxiety, age, and sex. Twenty-seven autistic participants…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Adults, Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Argyropoulos, Ioannis; Gellatly, Angus; Pilling, Michael; Carter, Wakefield – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2013
Object-substitution masking (OSM) occurs when a mask, such as four dots that surround a brief target item, onsets simultaneously with the target and offsets a short time after the target, rather than simultaneously with it. OSM is a reduction in accuracy of reporting the target with the temporally trailing mask, compared with the simultaneously…
Descriptors: Evidence, Interaction, Spatial Ability, Attention
Derenne, Adam – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2010
A shift in generalization gradients away from S+ and towards stimuli on the opposite end of the stimulus dimension from S- is a well established phenomenon in the laboratory, occurring with humans and nonhumans and with a wide range of stimuli. The phenomenon of gradient shifts has also been observed to have an analogous relationship to a variety…
Descriptors: Stimulus Generalization, Discrimination Learning, Shift Studies, Visual Stimuli
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Casey, M. Beth – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1975
Investigated the effect of correction and noncorrection procedures on the occurrence of the overlearning reversal effect (ORE) in 80 children 4-6 years of age. Results showing the existence of ORE at the preschool level are explained in terms of a response-switching strategy. (GO)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Feedback, Preschool Children, Shift Studies
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Campione, Joseph C. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1971
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Preschool Children, Shift Studies, Training
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Poliakoff, Ellen; Miles, Eleanor; Li, Xinying; Blanchette, Isabelle – Cognition, 2007
Viewing a threatening stimulus can bias visual attention toward that location. Such effects have typically been investigated only in the visual modality, despite the fact that many threatening stimuli are most dangerous when close to or in contact with the body. Recent multisensory research indicates that a neutral visual stimulus, such as a light…
Descriptors: Cues, Attention Control, Pictorial Stimuli, Spatial Ability
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Esposito, Nicholas J. – Developmental Psychology, 1975
Experiment 1 examined the relationship between dimensional preference and proportion of optional reversal shifts among adults. Experiment 2 examined dimensional preference and shift behaviors using an intradimensional-extradimensional shift paradigm. The results indicate that adults show the same type of behavior previously throught to…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Development, Dimensional Preference, Discrimination Learning
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Nicholson, John N.; Gray, Jeffrey A. – British Journal of Psychology, 1971
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Discrimination Learning, Individual Differences, Shift Studies
Shepp, Bryan E.; Gray, Vicky A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1971
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Psychological Studies, Shift Studies, Transfer of Training
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Schaeffer, Benson; Ellis, Stephen – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1970
Two experiments show that response to explicit dimensions is not crucial to the change from easier nonreversal to easier reversal shifts during overlearning in grammar school children ages 7, 8, and 9. (WY)
Descriptors: Attention, Cues, Discrimination Learning, Responses
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Brown, Ann L.; Campione, Joseph C. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1973
Response to PS 502 660. (CB)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Learning Theories, Mediation Theory, Research Methodology
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Berman, Phyllis W. – Child Development, 1973
If learning is viewed in terms of the tendency to approach a stimulus that has been rewarded and to avoid a stimulus that has not been rewarded, then it must be concluded that the subjects in this study did not learn. (Author)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Discrimination Learning, Preschool Children, Responses
Levy, Gary D.; Carter, D. Bruce – 1989
This study focused on the influence of gender schemas on children's abilities to focus their attention away from or toward stimuli containing the dimension of gender. Children identified as gender schematic and aschematic participated in a nonreversal discrimination learning paradigm in which one relevant dimension was gender-relevant and another…
Descriptors: Attention, Discrimination Learning, Preschool Children, Preschool Education
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Daehler, Marvin W.; And Others – Child Development, 1976
This study examined the equivalence of objects and pictures of objects in transfer discrimination of 72 children (ages 24-45 months). (BRT)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Infants, Perception, Preschool Children
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