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Duffy, Jim – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1992
Children and adults learned associations between line length and color. Subjects were then presented with pairs of colors and asked to choose the color that had been associated with the longer line. For all ages, choice reaction times were related to differences in, and ratios of, line lengths. (BC)
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Color, Memory
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Jusczyk, Peter W.; Johnson, Scott P.; Kennedy, Lori J.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 1999
This study compared role of motion in adults' and infants' perception of object unity. Findings favored ecologically-oriented accounts of object perception. Motion was a determinant of object unity for infants. Alignment and common motion contributed to adults' object-unity perception; synchronous color changes did not. Infants detected…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Color, Infants
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Viau, Elizabeth Anne – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 1998
Shows how word processors and color printers are promising tools for helping students to think more clearly as they read. Discusses how students can use different colored lettering to identify topic sentences; to separate descriptive from narrative or informational writing; to separate information from emotion in writing; and to make changes if…
Descriptors: Color, Reading Comprehension, Reading Improvement, Reading Instruction
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Galus, Pamela J. – Science Scope, 2000
Describes an inquiry-based experiment on the heat absorption of color that is developed from a scientific misconception. Uses three cans colored white, gray, and black and observes and compares the temperature changes of water in cans when placed under 100 watt lamps. (YDS)
Descriptors: Color, Heat, Middle Schools, Science Activities
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Colin, Philippe; Chauvet, Francoise; Viennot, Laurence – International Journal of Science Education, 2002
Focuses on difficulties students have in reading images and understanding a particular domain; e.g., optics and color. Concentrates on the extent to which teachers were conscious of such difficulties and what they suggested doing to avoid possible pitfalls. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Color, Optics, Science Education, Scientific Literacy
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Wilcox, Teresa – Cognition, 1999
Four experiments examined the perceptual features used by 4.5- to 11.5-month olds to individuate objects involved in occlusion events. Results indicated that 4.5-month olds used shape and size features to individuate objects in occlusion events. By 7.5 months, infants used pattern, and by 11.5 months, they used color to reason about object…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Color, Infants, Pattern Recognition
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Jacobsen, Erica K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2001
Includes an annotated bibliography of articles featured in this journal on art, dyes, glass, pottery and ceramics, interdisciplinary courses in art and chemistry, light and color, metalwork, and music. (YDS)
Descriptors: Art, Chemistry, Color, Higher Education
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Farran, Emily K.; Jarrold, Christopher – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) display poor visuo-spatial cognition relative to verbal abilities. Furthermore, whilst perceptual abilities are delayed, visuo-spatial construction abilities are comparatively even weaker, and are characterised by a local bias. We investigated whether this differentiation in visuo-spatial abilities can be…
Descriptors: Verbal Ability, Spatial Ability, Congenital Impairments, Disabilities
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Kaya, Naz; Epps, Helen H. – College Student Journal, 2004
Ninety-eight college students were asked to indicate their emotional responses to five principle hues (i.e., red, yellow, green, blue, purple), five intermediate hues (i.e., yellow-red, green-yellow, blue-green, purple-blue, and red-purple), and three achromatic colors (white, gray, and black) and the reasons for their choices. The color stimuli…
Descriptors: College Students, Emotional Response, Student Attitudes, Color
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Sabiston, Duane – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
In this article, the author describes that teaching students how to unlock the color of white is his passion. Like so many other art teachers, he struggled for years teaching color wheels and making value scales, only to be frustrated when students produced colorful charts and then made colorless paintings. He was teaching students how to mix…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Art Education, Art Activities, High Schools
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Strauss, Gregory P.; Allen, Daniel N.; Jorgensen, Melinda L.; Cramer, Stacey L. – Assessment, 2005
Previous studies have examined the reliability of scores derived from various Stroop tasks. However, few studies have compared reliability of more recently developed Stroop variants such as emotional Stroop tasks to standard versions of the Stroop. The current study developed four different single-stimulus Stroop tasks and compared test-retest…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Test Reliability, Visual Perception, Comparative Analysis
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Roberson, Debi; Davidoff, Jules; Davies, Ian R. L.; Shapiro, Laura R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
This study unites investigations into the linguistic relativity of color categories with research on children's category acquisition. Naming, comprehension, and memory for colors were tracked in 2 populations over a 3-year period. Children from a seminomadic equatorial African culture, whose language contains 5 color terms, were compared with a…
Descriptors: Memory, Investigations, African Culture, Visual Environment
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Withrow, Rebecca L. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development, 2004
This article reviews the published literature on the separate fields of art therapy and color therapy, synthesizing them in a proposed use of color within art therapy. Specific techniques focusing on use of color in a nonrepresentational expressive form are suggested as a way to extend the therapeutic benefits of art therapy. The intention of this…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Color, Counseling Techniques, Emotional Response
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Dalgleish, Tim – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
D. Algom, E. Chajut, and S. Lev presented a series of definitional, conceptual, and empirical arguments in support of their conclusion that the classic and emotional Stroop effects are, in their words, "unrelated phenomena" (p. 336), such that the term emotional Stroop effect is a misnomer in reference to the relatively greater interference in ink…
Descriptors: Visual Discrimination, Color, Concept Formation, Experimental Psychology
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Agter, Frank; Donk, Mieke – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Observers performed a preview search task in which, on some trials, they had to indicate the presence of a briefly presented probe-dot. Probes could be presented on locations corresponding to old or new elements and prior to or after the presentation of the new elements. After the presentation of the new elements, probes were generally detected…
Descriptors: Visual Discrimination, Color, Visual Perception, Task Analysis
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