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Dulaney, Cynthia L.; And Others – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1996
This study examined recognition memory for items and their location among adults with Down syndrome (n=24), adults with nonspecific mental retardation (n=22), and community volunteers (n=20). No differences in memory for spatial location were found between the two groups with mental retardation, though both groups performed worse than control…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Downs Syndrome, Memory
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Cruz, Ines; Febles, Maria; Diaz, Jose – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2000
Presents a case study that aimed to obtain information on students' mathematical comprehension levels and on whether students may or may not make use of visualization processes in solving mathematical problems. Discovers students' beliefs about teaching and learning processes in general, and mathematics in particular. (Contains 25 references.)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Mathematics Education, Spatial Ability
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Silver, Rawley – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 1998
Asks whether different scoring systems can explain why many studies have found female failures in performing tasks that were designed to assess concepts of horizontality and verticality. Presents new findings involving 86 men and boys and 84 women and girls through which no significant sex differences were found. Discusses suggestions and…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Expectation, Research Needs, Scoring
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Barnea, Nitza; Dori, Yehudit J. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 1999
Investigates the effects of using molecular modeling on students' spatial ability, understanding of new concepts related to geometric and symbolic representations, and perception of the model concept. (Author/CCM)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Classroom Environment, Computer Simulation, Perception
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Arendasy, Martin – International Journal of Testing, 2005
The future of test construction for certain psychological ability domains that can be analyzed well in a structured manner may lie--at the very least for reasons of test security--in the field of automatic item generation. In this context, a question that has not been explicitly addressed is whether it is possible to embed an item response theory…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Spatial Ability, Quality Control, Item Response Theory
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Quaiser-Pohl, Claudia – International Journal of Testing, 2003
Two new measures to assess spatial ability are presented: the mental cutting test "Schnitte" (Fay & Quaiser-Pohl, 1999; English version: Fay, Quaiser-Pohl, & Ronicke, 2003), a test for selecting people with extraordinary spatial abilities, and the Picture Rotation Test (Hinze, 2002; Hinze & Quaiser-Pohl, 2003), a mental rotation test for preschool…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Preschool Children, Spatial Ability, Measures (Individuals)
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Gluck, Judith; Fitting, Sylvia – International Journal of Testing, 2003
The aim of this article is to show that individuals differ in the way they solve spatial tasks of all kinds, and both research on and measurement of spatial ability could profit from an integration of strategy aspects. We first review evidence for both intra- and inter-individual strategy differences (including gender differences) in 3 domains of…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Spatial Ability, Individual Differences, Navigation
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So, Wing Chee; Coppola, Marie; Licciardello, Vincent; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Cognitive Science, 2005
Sign languages modulate the production of signs in space and use this spatial modulation to refer back to entities--to maintain coreference. We ask here whether spatial modulation is so fundamental to language in the manual modality that it will be invented by individuals asked to create gestures on the spot. English speakers were asked to…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Grammar, Manual Communication, Sign Language
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Massa, Laura J.; Mayer, Richard E.; Bohon, Lisa M. – Learning & Individual Differences, 2005
The gender role hypothesis posits that performance on a cognitive ability test is influenced by whether the test instructions frame the test as measuring a skill that is consistent or inconsistent with the test taker's gender role beliefs. The Bem sex role inventory was used to measure the gender role of female college students, and the group…
Descriptors: Females, Cognitive Ability, Spatial Ability, Empathy
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Lamy, Dominique; Leber, Andrew; Egeth, Howard E – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
Attentional allocation in feature-search mode (W. F. Bacon & H. E. Egeth, 1994) is thought to be solely determined by top-down factors, with no role for stimulus-driven salience. The authors reassessed this conclusion using variants of the spatial cuing and rapid serial visual presentation paradigms developed by C. L. Folk and colleagues (C. L.…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis
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Loftus, Geoffrey R.; Harley, Erin M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
We test 3 theories of global and local scene information acquisition, defining global and local in terms of spatial frequencies. By independence theories, high- and low-spatial-frequency information are acquired over the same time course and combine additively. By global-precedence theories, global information acquisition precedes local…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Learning Processes
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Jahn, Georg – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
In 4 experiments, the author explored the spontaneous construction of spatial situation models during discourse comprehension by using the sentence-recognition paradigm of J. D. Bransford, J. R. Barclay, and J. J. Franks (1972). In Experiment 1, signaling causal relevance of spatial relations was a necessary precondition for replicating their…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Sentences, Reading Comprehension, Psychological Studies
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Pelphrey, Kevin A.; Reznick, J. Steven; Goldman, Barbara Davis; Sasson, Noah; Morrow, Judy; Donahoe, Andrea; Hodgson, Katharine – Developmental Psychology, 2004
Eighty 5.5- to 12.5-month-old infants participated in 4 delayed-response procedures challenging shortterm visuospatial memory (STVM), 2 that varied the time between presentation and search and 2 that varied the number of locations. Within each type of challenge, 1 task required a gaze response and 1 required a reach response. There was little…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Infants, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception
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Fincher-Kiefer, Rebecca; D'Agostino, Paul R. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2004
It has been suggested that predictive and bridging inferences are generated at different levels of text representation: predictive inferences at a reader's situation model and bridging inferences at a reader's propositional textbase (Fincher-Kiefer, 1993, 1996; McDaniel, Schmalhofer, & Keefe, 2001; Schmalhofer, McDaniel, & Keefe, 2002). Recently,…
Descriptors: Memory, Inferences, Context Effect, Prediction
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Richardson, Daniel C.; Kirkham, Natasha Z. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
The ability to keep track of locations in a dynamic, multimodal environment is crucial for successful interactions with other people and objects. The authors investigated the existence and flexibility of spatial indexing in adults and 6-month-old infants by adapting an eye-tracking paradigm from D. C. Richardson and M. J. Spivey (2000). Multimodal…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Adults, Spatial Ability
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