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Furno, Lois Ehrler – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Effective learning occurs in auditory environments. Background noise is inherent to classrooms with recommended levels 15 decibels softer than instruction, which is rarely achieved. Learning is diminished by interference to the auditory reception of information, especially for students who are hard of hearing other diagnoses. Sound-field…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Elementary School Students, Hearing Impairments, Assistive Technology
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Maglio, Sam J.; Trope, Yaacov – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Can the mind be divorced from the body? As evidenced by a host of findings in the traditions of grounded cognition and embodiment, sensorimotor experience can exert a powerful influence on what and how people think. The current investigation explores the conditions that temper or enable this influence, proposing that level of mental construal may…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Sensory Experience, Human Body, Undergraduate Students
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Jensen, Christian; Mees, Inger M. – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2012
Transfer of sounds from L1 to L2 can obviously lead to inappropriate pronunciations, but assumptions about the effects such transfer may have on native listeners are often based on intuition or casual observation. This paper investigates the effects of direct transfer of four Danish vowels into English through a forced-choice word identification…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, English, Native Speakers, Native Language
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Al-Aidroos, Naseem; Emrich, Stephen M.; Ferber, Susanne; Pratt, Jay – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
In four experiments we assessed whether visual working memory (VWM) maintains a record of previously processed visual information, allowing old information to be inhibited, and new information to be prioritized. Specifically, we evaluated whether VWM contributes to the inhibition (i.e., visual marking) of previewed distractors in a preview search.…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Visual Perception, Short Term Memory, Individual Differences
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Watson, Derrick G.; Blagrove, Elisabeth – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Six experiments examined the influence of emotional valence on the tagging and enumeration of multiple targets. Experiments 1, 5 and 6 found that there was no difference in the efficiency of tagging/enumerating multiple negative or positive stimuli. Experiment 2 showed that, when neutral-expression face distractors were present, enumerating…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Visual Perception, Attention, Efficiency
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Schlinger, Henry D., Jr. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Rachlin (2012) makes two general assertions: (a) "To be human is to behave as humans behave, and to function in society as humans function," and (b) "essential human attributes such as consciousness, the ability to love, to feel pain, to sense, to perceive, and to imagine may all be possessed by a computer'. Although Rachlin's article is an…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Philosophy, Cognitive Processes, Cybernetics
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Gregg, Melissa K.; Samuel, Arthur G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Because the environment often includes multiple sounds that overlap in time, listeners must segregate a sound of interest (the auditory figure) from other co-occurring sounds (the unattended auditory ground). We conducted a series of experiments to clarify the principles governing the extraction of auditory figures. We distinguish between auditory…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Cues, Auditory Perception, Experiments
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Hein, Elisabeth; Moore, Cathleen M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
We live in a dynamic environment in which objects change location over time. To maintain stable object representations the visual system must determine how newly sampled information relates to existing object representations, the "correspondence problem". Spatiotemporal information is clearly an important factor that the visual system takes into…
Descriptors: Motion, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Stimuli
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Newman, Leonard S.; Bakina, Daria A.; Tang, Ying – American Psychologist, 2012
Not being taken seriously can be an occupational hazard for psychologists, but Lilienfeld's (February-March 2012) thought-provoking article (see record 2011-12007-001) provides a useful framework for thinking about (a) the forms that skepticism about psychological science can take, (b) the roots of such skepticism, and (c) how one might address or…
Descriptors: Psychology, Psychologists, Beliefs, Role Perception
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Seydell-Greenwald, Anna; Schmidt, Thomas – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Whereas physiological studies indicate that illusory contours (ICs) are signaled in early visual areas at short latencies, behavioral studies are divided as to whether IC processing can proceed in a fast, automatic, bottom-up manner or whether it requires extensive top-down intracortical feedback or even awareness and cognition. Here, we employ a…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Priming, Feedback (Response), Models
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Cabe, Patrick A.; Hofman, L. Leigh – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Four experiments examined haptic perception of two distal spatial properties in a bypass event. A hook suspended a string held taut between the participant's finger and a weight. Moving their fingers laterally beneath the hook, participants estimated the finger's point of closest approach (PCA) to the hook and bypass distance (BPD; i.e., hook…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Computation, Tactual Perception, Accuracy
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Tsubomi, Hiroyuki; Ikeda, Takashi; Osaka, Naoyuki – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Perceived brightness is well described by Stevens' power function (S. S. Stevens, 1957, On the psychophysical law, "Psychological Review", Vol. 64, pp. 153-181), with a power exponent of 0.33 (the cubic-root function of luminance). The power exponent actually varies across individuals, yet little is known about neural substrates underlying this…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diagnostic Tests, Visual Perception
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Durgin, Frank H.; Klein, Brennan; Spiegel, Ariana; Strawser, Cassandra J.; Williams, Morgan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Experiments take place in a physical environment but also a social environment. Generalizability from experimental manipulations to more typical contexts may be limited by violations of ecological validity with respect to either the physical or the social environment. A replication and extension of a recent study (a blood glucose manipulation) was…
Descriptors: Perception, Experiments, Social Psychology, Social Environment
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Kleber, Felicitas; Harrington, Jonathan; Reubold, Ulrich – Language and Speech, 2012
The present study is concerned with lax /[upsilon]/-fronting in Standard British English and in particular with whether this sound change in progress can be attributed to a waning of the perceptual compensation for the coarticulatory effects of context. Younger and older speakers produced various monosyllables in which /[upsilon]/ occurred in…
Descriptors: Age, Speech, Language Variation, Auditory Perception
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Wagner, Monica; Shafer, Valerie L.; Martin, Brett; Steinschneider, Mitchell – Brain and Language, 2012
The effect of exposure to the contextual features of the /pt/ cluster was investigated in native-English and native-Polish listeners using behavioral and event-related potential (ERP) methodology. Both groups experience the /pt/ cluster in their languages, but only the Polish group experiences the cluster in the context of word onset examined in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Phonology, Polish, Phonemes
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