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Middlebrooks, Paul G.; Sommer, Marc A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
This study investigated whether rhesus monkeys show evidence of metacognition in a reduced, visual oculomotor task that is particularly suitable for use in fMRI and electrophysiology. The 2-stage task involved punctate visual stimulation and saccadic eye movement responses. In each trial, monkeys made a decision and then made a bet. To earn…
Descriptors: Cues, Stimulation, Reaction Time, Eye Movements
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Hartwig, Maria; Bond, Charles F., Jr. – Psychological Bulletin, 2011
Decades of research has shown that people are poor at detecting lies. Two explanations for this finding have been proposed. First, it has been suggested that lie detection is inaccurate because people rely on invalid cues when judging deception. Second, it has been suggested that lack of valid cues to deception limits accuracy. A series of 4…
Descriptors: Deception, Cues, Nonverbal Communication, Social Psychology
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Johnson, Tyler G.; Bell, Kenneth W.; Prusak, Keven A. – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2011
Many physical educators have asked "how do I help my students become skilled?" Most would likely respond with one word, "practice." Teachers' belief systems tell them if students practice sufficiently the product of more skillful play will be attained. It's likely that students believe this too. They know that in order to play the game better,…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teaching Styles, Play, Beliefs
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Kidd, Celeste; White, Katherine S.; Aslin, Richard N. – Developmental Science, 2011
The ability to infer the referential intentions of speakers is a crucial part of learning a language. Previous research has uncovered various contextual and social cues that children may use to do this. Here we provide the first evidence that children also use speech disfluencies to infer speaker intention. Disfluencies (e.g. filled pauses "uh"…
Descriptors: Evidence, Drama, Cues, Intention
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Cohen, Robert; Pearson, Janelle – Social Education, 2011
A key working assumption of English teachers at the Essex Street Academy, a public high school on Manhattan's Lower East Side (and a partner school of New York University) is that literature can be taught most effectively when it is placed into historical context. Historical knowledge can help students who struggle with classic literature and find…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Slavery, Literature Appreciation, English Teachers
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Koutsoklenis, Athanasios; Papadopoulos, Konstantinos – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 2011
The study presented here examined which auditory cues individuals with visual impairments use more frequently and consider to be the most important for wayfinding in urban environments. It also investigated the ways in which these individuals use the most significant auditory cues. (Contains 1 table and 3 figures.)
Descriptors: Cues, Visual Impairments, Urban Areas, Auditory Stimuli
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Kim, Say Young; Wang, Min; Ko, In Yeong – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
Three experiments using a priming lexical decision paradigm were conducted to examine whether cross-language activation occurs via decomposition during the processing of derived words in Korean-English bilingual readers. In Experiment 1, when participants were given a real derived word and an interpretable derived pseudoword (i.e., illegal…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Bilingualism, Morphology (Languages), Reading Processes
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Wotton, J. M.; Elvebak, R. L.; Moua, L. C.; Heggem, N. M.; Nelson, C. A.; Kirk, K. M. – Language and Speech, 2011
The influence of sentence context on the recognition of naturally spoken vowels degraded by reverberation and Gaussian noise was investigated. Target words were paired to have similar consonant sounds but different vowels (e.g., map/mop) and were embedded early in sentences which provided three types of semantic context. Fifty-eight…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cues, Vowels, Semantics
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Edwards-Groves, Christine Joy – Language and Education, 2011
This paper presents research exploring "writing and text construction" practices in contemporary primary classrooms. In particular, the ways 17 teachers and their students engaged with technologies in the construction of classroom texts were investigated. The case studies presented prompt the necessity to extend more traditional…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Case Studies, Cues
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Cicchino, Jessica B.; Aslin, Richard N.; Rakison, David H. – Cognition, 2011
The associative learning account of how infants identify human motion rests on the assumption that this knowledge is derived from statistical regularities seen in the world. Yet, no catalog exists of what visual input infants receive of human motion, and of causal and self-propelled motion in particular. In this manuscript, we demonstrate that the…
Descriptors: Photography, Cues, Outcomes of Treatment, Infants
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Hills, Peter J.; Ross, David A.; Lewis, Michael B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to nonface stimuli arguably due to the holistic manner in which faces are processed. A qualification is put forward in which the first point fixated on is different for upright and inverted faces and this carries some of the face-inversion effect. Three experiments explored…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Visual Perception, Human Body, Attention
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Lobina, David J. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2011
The term "recursion" is used in at least four distinct theoretical senses within cognitive science. Some of these senses in turn relate to the different levels of analysis described by David Marr some 20 years ago; namely, the underlying competence capacity (the "computational" level), the performance operations used in real-time processing (the…
Descriptors: Grammar, Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Science, Competence
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Angell, Maureen E.; Nicholson, Joanna K.; Watts, Emily H.; Blum, Craig – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 2011
An adapted Power Card strategy was examined to determine effectiveness in decreasing latency in responding to teacher cues to initiate interactivity transitions in the classroom among three students, aged 10 to 11 years, with developmental disabilities (i.e., one with autism and two with intellectual disability). The Power Card strategy, a form of…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Developmental Disabilities, Autism, Mental Retardation
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Watanabe, Lynne M.; Hall-Kenyon, Kendra M. – Literacy Research and Instruction, 2011
This study examined the change in complexity of kindergarteners' writing after implementing writing instruction based on story elements. Writing samples from six students of three ability levels were collected over a 6-week period. Writing samples included students' oral language, pictures, and written text and were analyzed using two rubrics…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Young Children, Kindergarten, Story Grammar
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Kucer, Stephen B. – Reading Psychology, 2011
This research investigates the relationship among processing behaviors and their link to comprehending expository discourse. Students who orally read a chapter on geographical formations followed by a retelling. Using Pearson's chi-square and logistic regression, it was found that clauses were recalled whether the clause had been read with no…
Descriptors: Miscue Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Prediction, Investigations
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