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Herold, Debora S.; Nygaard, Lynne C.; Chicos, Kelly A.; Namy, Laura L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
This study examined whether children use prosodic correlates to word meaning when interpreting novel words. For example, do children infer that a word spoken in a deep, slow, loud voice refers to something larger than a word spoken in a high, fast, quiet voice? Participants were 4- and 5-year-olds who viewed picture pairs that varied along a…
Descriptors: Cues, Semantics, Vocabulary Development, Intonation
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Kuzmanovic, Bojana; Schilbach, Leonhard; Lehnhardt, Fritz-Georg; Bente, Gary; Vogeley, Kai – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2011
Clinical intuition and resent research (Senju et al., 2009) suggests that adults with high-functioning autism (HFA) are able to use explicit verbal information but fail to react upon subtle nonverbal cues in order to understand others and navigate social encounters. In order to investigate the relative influence of different domains of socially…
Descriptors: Cues, Nonverbal Communication, Autism, Cognitive Processes
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Richland, Lindsey E.; McDonough, Ian M. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2010
The ability to successfully discriminate between multiple potentially relevant source analogs when solving new problems is crucial to proficiency in a mathematics domain. Experimental findings in two different mathematical contexts demonstrate that providing cues to support comparative reasoning during an initial instructional analogy, relative to…
Descriptors: Cues, Logical Thinking, Mathematics Education, Evaluation
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Brigham, Nicolette Bainbridge; Yoder, Paul J.; Jarzynka, Melanie A.; Tapp, Jon – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2010
This study examined the sequential relationship between parent attentional cues and sustained attention to objects in young children with autism during a 20 min free-play interaction session. Twenty-five parent-child dyads with a preschool child with autism participated. Results indicated that (a) parent attentional cues that maintained the…
Descriptors: Cues, Autism, Parents, Attention
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Shi, Jinfu; Weng, Xuchu; He, Sheng; Jiang, Yi – Cognition, 2010
The human visual system is extremely sensitive to biological signals around us. In the current study, we demonstrate that biological motion walking direction can induce robust reflexive attentional orienting. Following a brief presentation of a central point-light walker walking towards either the left or right direction, observers' performance…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Cues, Physical Activities, Attention
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Ma, Joan K.-Y.; Whitehill, Tara L.; So, Susanne Y.-S. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2010
Purpose: Speech produced by individuals with hypokinetic dysarthria associated with Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by a number of features including impaired speech prosody. The purpose of this study was to investigate intonation contrasts produced by this group of speakers. Method: Speech materials with a question-statement contrast…
Descriptors: Sino Tibetan Languages, Neurological Impairments, Intonation, Articulation Impairments
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MacInnis, Cara C.; Mackinnon, Sean P.; MacIntyre, Peter D. – Current Research in Social Psychology, 2010
Public speakers believe their nervousness is more apparent to others than is actually the case, a phenomenon known as the illusion of transparency. Study 1, in which participants delivered a public speech to an audience, provided evidence of this phenomenon. Despite this, a substantial minority of participants (36%) thought that the audience would…
Descriptors: Public Speaking, Anxiety, Audiences, Affective Behavior
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Gellatly, Angus; Pilling, Michael; Carter, Wakefield; Guest, Duncan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Object substitution masking (OSM) is typically studied using a brief search display. The target item may be indicated by a cue/mask surrounding but not overlapping it. Report of the target is reduced when mask offset trails target offset rather than being simultaneous with it. We report 5 experiments investigating whether OSM can be obtained if…
Descriptors: Experiments, Cues, Adults, College Students
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Sahakyan, Lili; Goodmon, Leilani B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
In 5 experiments, the authors examined the influence of associative information in list-method directed forgetting, using the extralist cuing procedure (Nelson & McEvoy, 2005). Targets were studied in the absence of cues, but during retrieval, related cues were used to test their memory. Experiment 1 manipulated the degree of resonant…
Descriptors: Cues, Memory, Experiments, Experimental Psychology
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Burnham, Bryan R.; Neely, James H.; Naginsky, Yelena; Thomas, Matthew – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
After C. L. Folk, R. W. Remington, and J. C. Johnston (1992) proposed their contingent-orienting hypothesis, there has been an ongoing debate over whether purely stimulus-driven attentional capture can occur for visual events that are salient by virtue of a distinctive static property (as opposed to a dynamic property such as abrupt onset). The…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Criteria, Experiments, Evaluation Methods
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Jans, Bert; Peters, Judith C.; De Weerd, Peter – Psychological Review, 2010
A growing number of studies claim that spatial attention can be split "on demand" into several, segregated foci of enhanced processing. Intrigued by the theoretical ramifications of this proposal, we analyzed 19 relevant sets of experiments using four methodological criteria. We typically found several methodological limitations in each study that…
Descriptors: Models, Visual Perception, Spatial Ability, Attention
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Bourne, Lyle E., Jr.; Raymond, William D.; Healy, Alice F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Two experiments examined 3 variables affecting accuracy, response time, and reports of strategy use in a binary classification skill task. In Experiment 1, higher rule cue salience, allowing faster rule application, produced higher aggregate rule use than lower rule cue salience. After participants were pretrained on the relevant classification…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Reaction Time, Memory, Classification
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Pulido, Marco A.; Martinez, Guillermo – Psychological Record, 2010
The present study assessed the effects of systematically separating the cue from the response in temporally defined schedules of delayed signaled reinforcement. Identical schedules were used to study the effects of the independent variable on response acquisition and response maintenance. In the first experiment, 8 groups of 3 naive rats were…
Descriptors: Behavior, Reinforcement, Cues, Responses
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Duhon, Gary J.; House, Sara E.; Poncy, Brian C.; Hastings, Kim W.; McClurg, Sally C. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2010
This study examined the application of two generalization procedures designed to promote generalized responding across two early literacy skills. Letter sound fluency was targeted using direct intervention for three subjects within a multiple baseline design. After instruction was complete, two generalization procedures (cueing and providing…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Generalization, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Literacy
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Yu, Fu-Yun; Pan, Kuan-Jung – Educational Technology & Society, 2014
The focus of this study was to investigate the effects of student-question generation with online prompts on student academic achievement, question-generation performance, learning satisfaction and learning anxiety. This study adopted a quasi-experimental research design. Two classes of eighth grade students (N = 64) from one middle school…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Learning Strategies, Cues, Electronic Learning
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