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White, Harold B. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2012
Teachers' perception filter operates in all realms of their consciousness. It plays an important part in what and how students learn and should play a central role in what and how they teach. This may be obvious, but having a visual model of a perception filter can guide the way they think about education. In this article, the author talks about…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Visual Perception
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Zhou, Jifan; Huang, Xiang; Jin, Xinyi; Liang, Junying; Shui, Rende; Shen, Mowei – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
In simple mechanical events, we can directly perceive causal interactions of the physical objects. Physical cues (especially spatiotemporal features of the display) are found to associate with causal perception. Here, we demonstrate that cues of a completely different domain--"social cues"--also impact the causal perception of…
Descriptors: Cues, Social Influences, Attribution Theory, Nonverbal Communication
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Jarodzka, Halszka; Balslev, Thomas; Holmqvist, Kenneth; Nystrom, Marcus; Scheiter, Katharina; Gerjets, Peter; Eika, Berit – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2012
Complex perceptual tasks, like clinical reasoning based on visual observations of patients, require not only conceptual knowledge about diagnostic classes but also the skills to visually search for symptoms and interpret these observations. However, medical education so far has focused very little on how visual observation skills can be…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Logical Thinking, Clinical Diagnosis, Visual Perception
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Park, Joonkoo; Hebrank, Andrew; Polk, Thad A.; Park, Denise C. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2012
The visual recognition of letters dissociates from the recognition of numbers at both the behavioral and neural level. In this article, using fMRI, we investigate whether the visual recognition of numbers dissociates from letters, thereby establishing a double dissociation. In Experiment 1, participants viewed strings of consonants and Arabic…
Descriptors: Evidence, Numbers, Brain, Individual Differences
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Geldof, C. J. A.; van Wassenaer, A. G.; de Kieviet, J. F.; Kok, J. H.; Oosterlaan, J. – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2012
A range of neurobehavioral impairments, including impaired visual perception and visual-motor integration, are found in very preterm born children, but reported findings show great variability. We aimed to aggregate the existing literature using meta-analysis, in order to provide robust estimates of the effect of very preterm birth on visual…
Descriptors: Premature Infants, Visual Perception, Effect Size, Body Weight
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Purser, Harry R. M.; Farran, Emily K.; Courbois, Yannick; Lemahieu, Axelle; Mellier, Daniel; Sockeel, Pascal; Blades, Mark – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
The aim of this study was to investigate route-learning ability in 67 children aged 5 to 11 years and to relate route-learning performance to the components of Baddeley's model of working memory. Children carried out tasks that included measures of verbal and visuospatial short-term memory and executive control and also measures of verbal and…
Descriptors: Virtual Classrooms, Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory, Children
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Hernandez, Mireia; Costa, Albert; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Cognition, 2012
We ask whether bilingualism aids cognitive control over the inadvertent guidance of visual attention from working memory and from bottom-up cueing. We compare highly-proficient Catalan-Spanish bilinguals with Spanish monolinguals in three visual search conditions. In the working memory (WM) condition, attention was driven in a top-down fashion by…
Descriptors: Priming, Attention, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes
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Ramon, Meike; Rossion, Bruno – Brain and Cognition, 2012
In two behavioral experiments involving lateralized stimulus presentation, we tested whether one of the most commonly used measures of holistic face processing--the composite face effect--would be more pronounced for stimuli presented to the right as compared to the left hemisphere. In experiment 1, we investigated the composite face effect in a…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Recognition (Psychology), Visual Perception, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Kahan, Todd A.; Enns, James T. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Five experiments demonstrate that when dots appear beside a briefly presented target object, and persist on view longer than the target, the flanked object is perceptually altered by the dots. Three methods are used to explore this "object trimming effect". Experiments 1-3 assess participants' conscious reports of trimmed digits, Experiment 4 uses…
Descriptors: Repetition, Priming, Visual Perception, Geometric Concepts
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Rodd, Melissa – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2010
A well-documented experience of students of elementary Euclidean geometry is "seeing" a geometric result and being sure about its truth; this sort of experience gives rise to the notion of geometrical visualisation that is developed here. In this essay a philosophical argument for the epistemic potential of geometrical visualisation is reviewed,…
Descriptors: Geometry, Visualization, Epistemology, Mathematics Education
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Solomyak, Olla; Marantz, Alec – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
We employ a single-trial correlational MEG analysis technique to investigate early processing in the visual recognition of morphologically complex words. Three classes of affixed words were presented in a lexical decision task: free stems (e.g., taxable), bound roots (e.g., tolerable), and unique root words (e.g., vulnerable, the root of which…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Word Recognition, Visual Perception, Brain
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Da Pos, Osvaldo; Baratella, Linda; Sperandio, Gabriele – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2010
The present study explored the perceptual process of integration of luminance information in the production of the gray color of an object placed in an environment viewed from a window. The mean luminance of the object was varied for each mean luminance of the environment. Participants matched the gray color of the object with that of Munsell…
Descriptors: Light, Visual Perception, Color, College Students
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Keri, Szabolcs; Benedek, Gyorgy – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Skottun and Skoyles (2009) recently presented a comment on Vernier acuity and magnocellular dysfunctions in fragile X premutation carriers (Keri & Benedek, 2009). The authors concluded that our finding that the magnocellular deficit, as revealed by luminance-contrast sensitivity measurements, is associated with impaired Vernier acuity for…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Genetics, Visual Perception, Cytology
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LoBue, Vanessa – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Spiders are among the most common targets of fears and phobias in the world. In visual search tasks, adults detect their presence more rapidly than other kinds of stimuli. Reported here is an investigation of whether young children share this attentional bias for the detection of spiders. In a series of experiments, preschoolers and adults were…
Descriptors: Attention, Bias, Preschool Children, Adults
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Feil, Adam; Mestre, Jose P. – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2010
Previous studies examining expertise have used a wide range of methods. Beyond characterizing expert and novice behavior in different contexts and circumstances, many studies have examined the processes that comprise the behavior itself and, more recently, processes that comprise training and practice that develop expertise. Other studies, dating…
Descriptors: Expertise, Physics, Change, Visual Perception
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