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Peer reviewedRichards, John E. – Developmental Psychology, 1997
Examined the effect of attention on infants' responses to briefly exposed visual stimuli. Found that the duration of stimulus exposure in the familiarization phase was positively correlated with the preference for the novel stimulus in the paired-comparison procedure, and processing of briefly presented visual stimuli differed depending on the…
Descriptors: Attention, Child Development, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedHuguenin, Nancy H. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Sought to establish a valid computer measurement technique for educational assessment applications. Similarities and differences in performance on visual discrimination tasks for young children of normal development and adolescents with severe mental retardation were analyzed using multiple testing procedures. Found differences in the two groups…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attention, Measurement Techniques, Mental Age
Peer reviewedDetenber, Benjamin H.; Reeves, Byron – Journal of Communication, 1996
Argues that the human brain is not specialized to deal with 20th-century media. Measures effects of image size and motion on college students' emotional responses. Finds that image size positively affects the arousal and dominates dimensions of emotional responses, but has no significant effect on valance evaluations. Finds that still pictures…
Descriptors: Audience Response, College Students, Emotional Response, Higher Education
Peer reviewedWilson, Margaret; Emmorey, Karen – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2003
A study involving 18 adult signers with deafness and 26 hearing adults found that working memory for American Sign Language is sensitive to irrelevant signed input (and other structured visual input) in a manner similar to the effects of irrelevant auditory input on working memory for speech. (Contains references.) (CR)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adults, American Sign Language, Deafness
Peer reviewedMosenthal, Peter B.; Kirsch, Irwin S. – Journal of Reading, 1991
Shows how different types of process schematics depict changes in state in significantly different ways, emphasizing differently types of information and thus defining event phenomena differently. Provides extension activities to help students understand process schematics. (MG)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Information Dissemination, Information Processing, Models
Peer reviewedMather, Susan; Carroll, Cathryn – Perspectives in Education and Deafness, 1990
Communication strategies essential to make lesson content clear and visible when using sign language with deaf students are described. The strategies include getting students' attention, not overloading students with confusing visual stimuli, allowing students time to absorb visual information thoroughly, and carefully differentiating between…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, Interpersonal Communication
Peer reviewedNelson, Jenny – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1989
Defines televisual experience as a complex ensemble of bodily practices. Describes three thematic categories which include the experience of the captive phenomenal body and the escape from the cognitive body, both of which combine to produce the discovery of a body-in-difference. (KEH)
Descriptors: Audience Response, Cognitive Processes, Motor Reactions, Phenomenology
Peer reviewedSpencer, Patricia; Delk, Linda – American Annals of the Deaf, 1989
Performance by 77 hearing-impaired elementary students on test of visual processing was compared with scores on a test of reading comprehension. Performance intelligence quotient correlated with both visual processing and reading scores. Some variance in reading scores was explained by intelligence quotient and performance on memory tests for…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Hearing Impairments, Intelligence Quotient, Memory
Peer reviewedTakano, Yohtaro – Cognitive Psychology, 1989
A form perception theory is proposed in an attempt to understand problems in mental rotation and in perception of forms rotated in the frontal-parallel plane. The theory, along with distinctions among four types of information, was supported by two mental and three visual experiments with 74 undergraduate students. (TJH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Higher Education, Orientation, Pattern Recognition
Peer reviewedVeale, Ann – Early Child Development and Care, 1988
Discusses art development in young children. Correlates findings from play research with theories about the development of the creative process in children. Discusses implications for curriculum and teaching methods. (RJC)
Descriptors: Art Education, Child Development, Children, Childrens Art
Peer reviewedFletcher, Samuel G. – Volta Review, 1989
The paper describes dynamic orometric instrumentation and procedures developed to measure, display, and guide changes in vowel and consonant production through visual articulatory modeling and feedback routines. Sensors are placed in the mouth to detect tongue shapes, positions, and actions during speech of hearing-impaired talkers, and online…
Descriptors: Articulation Impairments, Computer Oriented Programs, Feedback, Hearing Impairments
Peer reviewedReid, David; Broadbridge, Jane – British Educational Research Journal, 1988
Examines the effect of perspective and color on the ability of 192 secondary school children in England to observe danger points in a typical kitchen scene. Reports that more able children perform significantly better than their peers, and that the type of color employed contributes significantly to the scores but gender does not. (GEA)
Descriptors: Color, Depth Perception, Educational Research, Foreign Countries
Kopenhaver, Lillian Lodge – Student Press Review, 1993
Advises that teachers help journalism and mass communication students learn to interpret and create clear, effective visual messages. Argues that each introductory journalism course should explore connotations of colors, shapes, and texture in print and broadcast media. (PA)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journalism, Layout (Publications), Mass Media
Peer reviewedFisher, Bonnie; Nasar, Jack L. – Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 1995
Describes microlevel features associated with fear spots. Respondents were interviewed about their fear of victimization in relation to eight outdoor areas that varied in the degree to which they offered prospect, concealment, and ease of escape. Higher levels of fear were associated with negative aspects of the former attributes. (JBJ)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Crime, Fear, Higher Education
Peer reviewedRoberts, Kenneth – Cognitive Development, 1995
Four experiments with 36 infants studied how children organize objects categorically in the absence of input. Outcomes were not consistent with the predictions of bias accounts and considerably weaken the case for a psychologically real noun-bias prior to the vocabulary explosion. Findings are more consistent with children's use of information as…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes


