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Callison, Daniel – School Library Media Activities Monthly, 2001
Discusses basic facts about the brain and new research findings concerning growth and development that may help reconsider how information literacy skills are taught. Explains Kovalik's Integrated Thematic Instruction Model that recommends taking into account brain research and tying into relevant activities for the entire school year. (LRW)
Descriptors: Brain, Information Literacy, Information Skills, Learning Activities
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Summerford, Cathie – Teaching Elementary Physical Education, 2001
Discusses the role of movement in brain function for academic learning, examining problems related to children's sedentary lifestyle and highlighting related literature, which includes a study that compared the mental performance of students who were involved in regular continuous activity to that of a group of inactive students and found that…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Brain, Elementary Education, Exercise
Perry, Bruce – Instructor, 2000
Describes how to gain optimal learning in the classroom by activating different parts of the brain. Neural systems fatigue very quickly and need to rest. Only a few minutes of factual lecture can be tolerated before the brain seeks other stimuli. The most effective presentation must move back and forth through interrelated neural systems, weaving…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies
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Kender, Joseph P.; Kender, Mark A. – Reading Horizons, 1998
Reviews some of the most pertinent current research on possible causes of dyslexia. Offers guidelines for the prognosis and treatment of dyslexics and literary options for reading teachers and specialists to use in working with dyslexia. (PA)
Descriptors: Brain, Dyslexia, Literature Reviews, Neurological Impairments
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Bodary, David L.; Miller, Larry D. – Communication Education, 2000
Investigates differences in brain structures, as reflected in hemispheric laterality, and sex on communicator style preferences. Combines handedness, familial sinistrality, and related correlates as a predictor of standard or anomalous hemispheric dominance. Finds data consistent with hypothesis that communication preferences have a…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Communication Research, Higher Education, Sex Differences
Begley, Sharon – Newsweek, 1997
Explores how experiences after birth exert a dramatic and precise impact, physically determining how the intricate neural circuits of the brain are wired, in particular, in areas of language and vocabulary. Discusses the brain's acute vulnerability to trauma such as under or over stimulation or abuse. (HTH)
Descriptors: Brain, Child Neglect, Cognitive Development, Early Experience
Rosenberg, Debra; Reibstein, Larry – Newsweek, 1997
Notes the difference between "properly" stimulated and "expensively stimulated" or "over" stimulated when it comes to providing an environment for infant brain development. Highlights the effectiveness of just talking to a child. Suggests that more important than a particular toy is that parents be attuned to the kind…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Rearing, Childhood Needs, Infants
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Kirkendall, Donald T.; Garrett, William E., Jr. – Journal of Athletic Training, 2001
Discusses how purposeful heading of soccer balls and head injuries affect soccer players' cognitive dysfunction. Cognitive deficits may occur for many reasons. Heading cannot be blamed when details of the actual event and impact are unknown. Concussions are the most common head injury in soccer and a factor in cognitive deficits and are probably…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Brain, Cognitive Ability
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D'Arcangelo, Marcia – Educational Leadership, 2001
Interview with neuropsychologist Brain Butterworth about what research has revealed about how the brain learns abstract concepts such as mathematics and the implications of these findings for teaching mathematics. (PKP)
Descriptors: Brain, Elementary Secondary Education, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills
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Carver, Leslie J. – Infant and Child Development, 2006
Jones and Herbert describe research on deferred imitation and how this research reflects on the development of explicit memory in infancy. The article raises several interesting questions about how the medial temporal lobe memory system develops. In this commentary, I discuss some of the additional theoretical and empirical questions that are…
Descriptors: Infants, Imitation, Individual Differences, Generalization
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Buchsbaum, Bradley; Pickell, Bert; Love, Tracy; Hatrak, Marla; Bellugi, Ursula; Hickok, Gregory – Brain and Language, 2005
The nature of the representations maintained in verbal working memory is a topic of debate. Some authors argue for a modality-dependent code, tied to particular sensory or motor systems. Others argue for a modality-neutral code. Sign language affords a unique perspective because it factors out the effects of modality. In an fMRI experiment, deaf…
Descriptors: Memory, Sign Language, Deafness, Neurolinguistics
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Fize, Denis; Fabre-Thorpe, Michele; Richard, Ghislaine; Doyon, Bernard; Thorpe, Simon J. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Humans are fast and accurate at performing an animal categorization task with natural photographs briefly flashed centrally. Here, this central categorization task is compared to a three position task in which photographs could appear randomly either centrally, or at 3.6 [degrees] eccentricity (right or left) of the fixation point. A mild…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Classification, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes
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Shanahan, Murray; Baars, Bernard – Cognition, 2005
The subject of this article is the frame problem, as conceived by certain cognitive scientists and philosophers of mind, notably Fodor for whom it stands as a fundamental obstacle to progress in cognitive science. The challenge is to explain the capacity of so-called informationally unencapsulated cognitive processes to deal effectively with…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Information Processing, Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Processes
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Fernandes, M. A.; Smith, M. L.; Logan, W.; Crawley, A.; McAndrews, M. P. – Brain and Language, 2006
We investigated the relationship between ear advantage scores on the Fused Dichotic Words Test (FDWT), and laterality of activation in fMRI using a verb generation paradigm in fourteen children with epilepsy. The magnitude of the laterality index (LI), based on spatial extent and magnitude of activation in classical language areas (BA 44/45,…
Descriptors: Listening Comprehension Tests, Epilepsy, Language Processing, Children
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Sundermeier, Brian A.; Virtue, Sandra M.; Marsolek, Chad J.; van den Broek, Paul – Brain and Language, 2005
In this study, we investigated whether the left and right hemispheres are differentially involved in causal inference generation. Participants read short inference-promoting texts that described either familiar or less-familiar scenarios. After each text, they performed a lexical decision on a letter string (which sometimes constituted an…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Inferences, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Reading Comprehension
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