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Yoshimura, Yuki; MacWhinney, Brian – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2010
Case marking is the major cue to sentence interpretation in Japanese, whereas animacy and word order are much weaker. However, when subjects and their cases markers are omitted, Japanese honorific and humble verbs can provide information that compensates for the missing case role markers. This study examined the usage of honorific and humble verbs…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Cues, Verbs, Grammar
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Gabriele, Alison – Second Language Research, 2010
Previous studies on the second language acquisition of telicity have suggested that learners can use morphosyntactic cues to interpret sentences as telic or atelic even in cases where the cues differ in the first language (L1) and second language (L2) (Slabakova, 2001, 2005; Gabriele, 2008; Kaku et al., 2008a, 2008b). The present study extends…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cues, Verbs, Nouns
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Khoury-Kassabri, Mona; Sharvet, Rachel; Braver, Efi; Livneh, Chaim – Research on Social Work Practice, 2010
This study assesses the outcomes of group intervention program with violent juveniles. The intervention is based on the ecological approach of Edleson and Tolman (1992). Forty-eight juveniles referred to the juvenile probation service because of violent crime completed the 16 sessions of the intervention. Participants completed questionnaires…
Descriptors: Intervention, Violence, Crime, Evaluation
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de Koning, Bjorn B.; Tabbers, Huib K.; Rikers, Remy M. J. P.; Paas, Fred – Computers & Education, 2010
This study investigated whether learners construct more accurate mental representations from animations when instructional explanations are provided via narration than when learners attempt to infer functional relations from the animation through self-explaining. Also effects of attention guidance by means of cueing are investigated. Psychology…
Descriptors: Animation, Cues, Knowledge Level, Human Body
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Soto, David; Wriglesworth, Alice; Bahrami-Balani, Alex; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
We show that perceptual sensitivity to visual stimuli can be modulated by matches between the contents of working memory (WM) and stimuli in the visual field. Observers were presented with an object cue (to hold in WM or to merely attend) and subsequently had to identify a brief target presented within a colored shape. The cue could be…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Cues, Identification, Visual Perception
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Swanson, H. Lee; Kehler, Pam; Jerman, Olga – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2010
Two experiments investigated the effects of strategy knowledge and strategy training on the working memory (WM) performance in children (ages 10-11) with and without reading disabilities (RD). Experiment 1 examined the relationship between strategy knowledge (stability of strategy choices) and WM performance as a function of initial, gain (cued),…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Difficulties, Short Term Memory, Children
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Martin, Sarah E.; Boekamp, John R.; McConville, David W.; Wheeler, Elizabeth E. – Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 2010
This study examined emotion perception processes in preschool aged children presenting with clinically significant emotional and behavior problems, with emphasis on sadness perception accuracy (i.e., the ability to correctly identify sadness from expressive and situational cues) and anger perception bias (i.e., the tendency to perceive anger in…
Descriptors: Cues, Behavior Problems, Emotional Response, Preschool Children
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Boucheix, Jean-Michel; Lowe, Richard K. – Learning and Instruction, 2010
Two experiments used eye tracking to investigate a novel cueing approach for directing learner attention to low salience, high relevance aspects of a complex animation. In the first experiment, comprehension of a piano mechanism animation containing spreading-colour cues was compared with comprehension obtained with arrow cues or no cues. Eye…
Descriptors: Animation, Comprehension, Cues, Eye Movements
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Waszak, Florian; Li, Shu-Chen; Hommel, Bernhard – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Using a population-based sample of 263 individuals ranging from 6 to 89 years of age, we investigated the gains and losses in the abilities to (a) use exogenous cues to shift attention covertly and (b) ignore conflicting information across the life span. The participants' ability to shift visual attention was tested by a typical Posner-type…
Descriptors: Cues, Older Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Ability
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Hubbard, Timothy L. – Psychological Bulletin, 2010
The empirical literature on auditory imagery is reviewed. Data on (a) imagery for auditory features (pitch, timbre, loudness), (b) imagery for complex nonverbal auditory stimuli (musical contour, melody, harmony, tempo, notational audiation, environmental sounds), (c) imagery for verbal stimuli (speech, text, in dreams, interior monologue), (d)…
Descriptors: Verbal Stimuli, Auditory Stimuli, Schizophrenia, Auditory Discrimination
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De Moura, Maria Clara Drummond Soares; do Valle, Luiz Eduardo Ribeiro; Resende, Maria Bernadete Dutra; Pinto, Katia Osternack – Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2010
Aim: The cognitive deficits present in the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) are not yet well characterized. Attention, considered to be the brain mechanism responsible for the selection of sensory stimuli, could be disturbed in DMD, contributing, at least partially, to the observed global cognitive deficit. The aim of this study was to…
Descriptors: Etiology, Neurological Impairments, Diseases, Spatial Ability
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Graf, Erich W.; Adams, Wendy J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
A priority for the visual system is to construct 3-dimensional surfaces from visual primitives. Information is combined across individual cues to form a robust representation of the external world. Here, it is shown that surface completion relying on multiple visual cues influences relative dominance during binocular rivalry. The shape of a…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Cues, Context Effect, Experiments
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Juslin, Peter; Karlsson, Linnea; Olsson, Henrik – Cognition, 2008
There is considerable evidence that judgment is constrained to additive integration of information. The authors propose an explanation of why serial and additive cognitive integration can produce accurate multiple cue judgment both in additive and non-additive environments in terms of an adaptive division of labor between multiple representations.…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Cues
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Carlson, Laura A.; Van Deman, Shannon R. – Cognition, 2008
Spatial terms such as "right" are potentially ambiguous because they can refer to different regions of space when defined by competing reference frames (e.g., my "right" within a relative reference frame versus an object's "right" within an intrinsic reference frame). In such situations, previous research has suggested that multiple reference…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Spatial Ability, Cues, Language Processing
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Oliveira, Luis; Machado, Armando – Learning and Motivation, 2008
To test the assumptions of two models of timing, Scalar Expectancy Theory (SET) and Learning to Time (LeT), nine pigeons were exposed to two temporal discriminations, each signaled by a different cue. On half of the trials, pigeons learned to choose a red key after a 1.5-s horizontal bar and a green key after a 6-s horizontal bar; on the other…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Animals, Cues, Models
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