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ten Brug, Annet; van der Putten, Annette; Penne, Anneleen; Maes, Bea; Vlaskamp, Carla – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2012
Background: Multi-sensory storytelling (MSST) books are individualized stories, which involve sensory stimulation in addition to verbal text. Despite the frequent use of MSST in practice, little research is conducted into its structure, content and effectiveness. This study aims at the analysis of the development, content and application in…
Descriptors: Severe Mental Retardation, Multiple Disabilities, Story Telling, Books
van Rees, Lauren J.; Ballard, Kirrie J.; McCabe, Patricia; Macdonald-D'Silva, Anita G.; Arciuli, Joanne – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2012
Purpose: Impaired lexical stress production characterizes multiple pediatric speech disorders. Effective remediation strategies are not available, and little is known about the normal process of learning to assign and produce lexical stress. This study examined whether typically developing (TD) children can be trained to produce lexical stress on…
Descriptors: Children, Training, Perceptual Motor Learning, Language Processing
Gunraj, Danielle N.; Klin, Celia M. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2012
Despite the longstanding belief in an inner voice, there is surprisingly little known about the perceptual features of that voice during text processing. This article asked whether readers infer nonlinguistic phonological features, such as speech rate, associated with a character's speech. Previous evidence for this type of auditory imagery has…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Silent Reading, Auditory Stimuli, Verbal Communication
Fleischer, Zuzanna; Pickering, Martin J.; McLean, Janet F. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
This study asked whether bilinguals construct a language-independent level of information structure for the sentences that they produce. It reports an experiment in which a Polish-English bilingual and a confederate of the experimenter took turns to describe pictures to each other and to find those pictures in an array. The confederate produced a…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Sentence Structure, Nouns
Ogletree, Billy T.; Davis, Patricia; Hambrecht, Georgia; Phillips, Ellen Wooten – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 2012
A milieu teaching sequence was used to train photograph exchange as a method of requesting to a 7-year-old boy with autism. A multiple baseline design across four items (ball, puzzle, books, bubbles) was used to identify a functional relation between requesting and the milieu teaching sequence. Although performance during intervention was…
Descriptors: Photography, Autism, Males, Young Children
Shook, Anthony; Marian, Viorica – Cognition, 2012
Bilinguals have been shown to activate their two languages in parallel, and this process can often be attributed to overlap in input between the two languages. The present study examines whether two languages that do not overlap in input structure, and that have distinct phonological systems, such as American Sign Language (ASL) and English, are…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Phonology, English, American Sign Language
Kuwabara, Megumi; Smith, Linda B. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Growing evidence indicates a suite of generalized differences in the attentional and cognitive processing of adults from Eastern and Western cultures. Cognition in Eastern adults is often more relational and in Western adults is more object focused. Three experiments examined whether these differences characterize the cognition of preschool…
Descriptors: Evidence, Preschool Children, Cultural Differences, Cognitive Development
Oakes, Lisa M. – Infancy, 2012
In 2004, McMurray and Aslin edited for "Infancy" a special section on eye tracking. The articles in that special issue revealed the enormous promise of automatic eye tracking with young infants and demonstrated that eye-tracking procedures can provide significant insight into the emergence of cognitive, social, and emotional processing in infancy.…
Descriptors: Infants, Human Body, Eye Movements, Research Methodology
Brewin, Chris R.; Huntley, Zoe; Whalley, Matthew G. – Cognition, 2012
Flashbacks are involuntary, emotion-laden images experienced by individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The qualities of flashbacks could under certain circumstances lead to source memory errors. Participants with PTSD wrote a trauma narrative and reported the experience of flashbacks. They were later presented with stimuli from…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Memory, Validity
Demeyere, Nele; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Evidence is presented for the immediate apprehension of exact small quantities. Participants performed a quantification task (are the number of items greater or smaller than?), and carry-over effects were examined between numbers requiring the same response. Carry-over effects between small numbers were strongly affected by repeats of pattern and…
Descriptors: Evidence, Numbers, Pattern Recognition, Cultural Awareness
Rey-Mermet, Alodie; Meier, Beat – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
When bivalent stimuli (i.e., stimuli with features for two different tasks) appear occasionally, performance is slower on subsequent univalent stimuli. This "bivalency effect" reflects an adjustment of cognitive control arising from the more demanding context created by bivalent stimuli. So far, it has been investigated only on task…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cognitive Style, Stimuli, Conflict
Davidenko, Nicolas; Flusberg, Stephen J. – Cognition, 2012
Visual processing is highly sensitive to stimulus orientation; for example, face perception is drastically worse when faces are oriented inverted vs. upright. However, stimulus orientation must be established in relation to a particular reference frame, and in most studies, several reference frames are conflated. Which reference frame(s) matter in…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Task Analysis, Experiments, Perception
Mattler, Uwe; Palmer, Simon – Cognition, 2012
Unconscious visual stimuli can be processed by human observers and modulate their behavior. This has been shown for masked prime stimuli that influence motor responses to subsequent target stimuli. Beyond this, masked stimuli can also affect participants' behavior when they are free to choose one of two response alternatives. This finding…
Descriptors: Priming, Visual Stimuli, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes
de Freitas, Elizabeth; Sinclair, Nathalie – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2012
In this paper, we use the work of philosopher Gilles Chatelet to rethink the gesture/diagram relationship and to explore the ways mathematical agency is constituted through it. We argue for a fundamental philosophical shift to better conceptualize the relationship between gesture and diagram, and suggest that such an approach might open up new…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Semiotics, Correlation, Schemata (Cognition)
Cohn, Neil; Paczynski, Martin; Jackendoff, Ray; Holcomb, Phillip J.; Kuperberg, Gina R. – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
Just as syntax differentiates coherent sentences from scrambled word strings, the comprehension of sequential images must also use a cognitive system to distinguish coherent narrative sequences from random strings of images. We conducted experiments analogous to two classic studies of language processing to examine the contributions of narrative…
Descriptors: Sentences, Semantics, Syntax, Language Processing

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