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Landry, Oriane; Mitchell, Peter L.; Burack, Jacob A. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2009
Background: Are persons with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) slower than typically developing individuals to read the meaning of a symbolic cue in a visual orienting paradigm? Methods: Participants with ASD (n = 18) and performance mental age (PMA) matched typically developing children (n = 16) completed two endogenous orienting conditions in…
Descriptors: Cues, Mental Age, Autism, Attention
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Aviezer, Hillel; Bentin, Shlomo; Hassin, Ran R.; Meschino, Wendy S.; Kennedy, Jeanne; Grewal, Sonya; Esmail, Sherali; Cohen, Sharon; Moscovitch, Morris – Brain, 2009
Numerous studies have demonstrated that Huntington's disease mutation-carriers have deficient explicit recognition of isolated facial expressions. There are no studies, however, which have investigated the recognition of facial expressions embedded within an emotional body and scene context. Real life facial expressions are typically embedded in…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Perception, Neurological Impairments, Genetic Disorders
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Tagliapietra, Lara; Fanari, R.; Collina, S.; Tabossi, P. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2009
Two cross-modal priming experiments tested whether lexical access is constrained by syllabic structure in Italian. Results extend the available Italian data on the processing of stressed syllables showing that syllabic information restricts the set of candidates to those structurally consistent with the intended word (Experiment 1). Lexical…
Descriptors: Syllables, Word Recognition, Language Processing, Romance Languages
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Hammond, Angela; Westhues, Anne; Hanbidge, Alice Schmidt – Journal of Primary Prevention, 2009
The purpose of this study was to determine whether children who participated in a booster program 3 years after completing an emotion regulation program show a greater increase between pretest and post-test in the development of emotion regulation skills than children in a comparison group. A booster program was implemented as a pilot project with…
Descriptors: Cues, Evaluators, Pilot Projects, Pretests Posttests
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Jordan, Timothy R.; Paterson, Kevin B.; Kurtev, Stoyan; Xu, Mengyun – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Many studies have claimed that hemispheric processing is split precisely at the foveal midline and so place great emphasis on the precise location at which words are fixated. These claims are based on experiments in which a variety of fixation procedures were used to ensure fixation accuracy but the effectiveness of these procedures is unclear. We…
Descriptors: Cues, Word Recognition, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes
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Anderson, Raquel T.; Lockowitz, Alison – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2009
The purpose of this investigation was to identify how Spanish-speaking preschool children with and without specific language impairment (SLI) use the various cues available for ascribing a noun's inherent gender in the language. Via an invented word task, four types of cues were isolated and presented to each child: (1) two types of noun-internal…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Adults, Spanish Speaking, Nouns
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Fernandes, Tania; Kolinsky, Regine; Ventura, Paulo – Cognition, 2009
This study combined artificial language learning (ALL) with conventional experimental techniques to test whether statistical speech segmentation outputs are integrated into adult listeners' mental lexicon. Lexicalization was assessed through inhibitory effects of novel neighbors (created by the parsing process) on auditory lexical decisions to…
Descriptors: Cues, Phonology, Artificial Languages, Probability
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Drgas, Szymon; Blaszak, Magdalena A. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2009
Purpose: To study the perceptual consequences of changes in parameters of vocoded speech in various reverberation conditions. Method: The 3 controlled variables were number of vocoder bands, instantaneous frequency change rate, and reverberation conditions. The effects were quantified in terms of (a) nonsense words' recognition scores for young…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Acoustics, Auditory Stimuli, Word Recognition
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Demeure, Virginie; Bonnefon, Jean-Francois; Raufaste, Eric – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
A successful theory of conditional reasoning requires an account of how reasoners recognize the pragmatic function a conditional statement is meant to perform. Situations in which it is ambiguous whether a conditional statement was meant to add information or to correct a mistake are discussed in this article. This ambiguity has direct…
Descriptors: Cues, Figurative Language, Logical Thinking, Inferences
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Smith, Philip L.; Ratcliff, Roger – Psychological Review, 2009
The simplest attentional task, detecting a cued stimulus in an otherwise empty visual field, produces complex patterns of performance. Attentional cues interact with backward masks and with spatial uncertainty, and there is a dissociation in the effects of these variables on accuracy and on response time. A computational theory of performance in…
Descriptors: Theories, Attention, Decision Making, Visual Perception
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Dickhauser, Oliver; Reinhard, Marc-Andre; Diener, Claudia; Bertrams, Alex – Learning and Individual Differences, 2009
The present article analyzed, how need for cognition (NFC) influences the formation of performance expectancies. When processing information, individuals with lower NFC often rely on salient information and shortcuts compared to individuals higher in NFC. We assume that these preferences of processing will also make individuals low in NFC more…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Cues, Academic Achievement, Inferences
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McRoberts, Gerald W.; McDonough, Colleen; Lakusta, Laura – Infancy, 2009
Four experiments investigated infants' preferences for age-appropriate and age-inappropriate infant-directed speech (IDS) over adult-directed speech (ADS). Two initial experiments showed that 6-, 10-, and 14-month-olds preferred IDS directed toward younger infants, and 4-, 8-, 10-, and 14-month-olds, but not 6-month-olds, preferred IDS directed…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Language Acquisition, Experiments
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Fan, Jin; Gu, Xiaosi; Guise, Kevin G.; Liu, Xun; Fossella, John; Wang, Hongbin; Posner, Michael I. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
One current conceptualization of attention subdivides it into functions of alerting, orienting, and executive control. Alerting describes the function of tonically maintaining the alert state and phasically responding to a warning signal. Automatic and voluntary orienting are involved in the selection of information among multiple sensory inputs.…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Attention, Brain, Neurological Organization
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Leaf, Justin B.; Taubman, Mitchell; Bloomfield, Stephanie; Palos-Rafuse, Letty; Leaf, Ron; McEachin, John; Misty L. Oppenheim – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2009
This study assessed the effectiveness of a Teaching Interaction procedure for four social skills across three participants diagnosed with autism. All social skills fell into four broad domains (i.e., social-communication, play, emotion skills, and choice/selection skills). In addition, a teaching package was used to increase communication between…
Descriptors: Play, Intervention, Prosocial Behavior, Autism
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Stamper, John; Barnes, Tiffany; Croy, Marvin – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2011
The Hint Factory is an implementation of our novel method to automatically generate hints using past student data for a logic tutor. One disadvantage of the Hint Factory is the time needed to gather enough data on new problems in order to provide hints. In this paper we describe the use of expert sample solutions to "seed" the hint generation…
Descriptors: Cues, Prompting, Learning Strategies, Teaching Methods
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