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Peer reviewedWise, James A. – Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 1999
Presents both theoretical and technical bases on which to build a "science of text visualization." The Spatial Paradigm for Information Retrieval and Exploration (SPIRE) text-visualization system, which images information from free-text documents as natural terrains, serves as an example of the "ecological approach" in its visual metaphor, its…
Descriptors: Electronic Text, Information Processing, Information Retrieval, Information Systems
Peer reviewedCornoldi, Cesare; Rigoni, Fiorenza; Tressoldi, Patrizio Emmanuele; Vio, Claudio – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1999
A study compared 11 Italian children (ages 7-11) with nonverbal learning disabilities (NVLD) to 49 controls on four tasks requiring visuospatial working memory and visual imagery. Results found the children with NVLD showed deficits in the use of visuospatial working memory and visual imagery. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Etiology, Foreign Countries, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedMarkham, Roslyn; Howie, Pauline; Hlavacek, Sonia – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1999
Studied whether patterns of developmental progression in reality monitoring were present in visual and auditory modalities and the role of cross-modal imagery in reality-monitoring tasks. Found scores revealed evidence of developmental progression in both auditory and visual source-monitoring tasks, but no effect of cross-modal imagery. (Author)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Child Development
Peer reviewedBahrick, Lorraine E. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Assessed development of infants' sensitivity to two nested amodal temporal relations in audible and visible events. Found that sensitivity to synchrony was present by 4 weeks, remaining stable across age. Sensitivity to composition emerged by 7 weeks, increasing dramatically with age. Noted pattern of increasing specificity in perception…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Auditory Perception, Cross Sectional Studies, Habituation
Peer reviewedSiok, Wai Ting; Fletcher, Paul – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Examined role of phonological awareness and visual-orthographic skills in Chinese reading acquisition among first, second, third, and fifth graders who had learned the Hanyu Pinyin script. Found that visual skills predicted reading success at lower grades; pinyin knowledge and ability to discriminate homophonic characters predicted reading success…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Chinese, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedCoull, Jamie; Tremblay, Luc; Elliott, Digby – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2001
Examined two aspects of the specificity of practice hypothesis using a tracking task. In one experiment, visual or auditory feedback about performance was provided. In a second experiment, visual and auditory information were combined. Both experiments supported the specificity of practice hypothesis. Instructing participants to attend to one…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, College Students, Feedback, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSmith-Shank, Deborah L. – Arts and Learning Research, 2000
Focuses on the author's "semiotic self" by presenting questions and reflections. Discusses the overlapping groups to which one's multiple "selves" belong. Explains that these groups consist of people who share vocabulary, rituals, and understandings. (CMK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Culture, Fine Arts, Groups
Lazareva, Olga F.; Smirnova, Anna A.; Bagozkaja, Maria S.; Zorina, Zoya A.; Rayevsky, Vladimir V.; Wasserman, Edward A. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2004
Eight crows were taught to discriminate overlapping pairs of visual stimuli (A+ B-, B+ C-, C+ D-, and D+ E-). For 4 birds, the stimuli were colored cards with a circle of the same color on the reverse side whose diameter decreased from A to E (ordered feedback group). These circles were made available for comparison to potentially help the crows…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Feedback (Response), Reinforcement, Animals
Gredeback, Gustaf; von Hofsten, Claes – Infancy, 2004
Infants' ability to track temporarily occluded objects that moved on circular trajectories was investigated in 20 infants using a longitudinal design. They were first seen at 6 months and then every 2nd month until the end of their 1st year. Infants were presented with occlusion events covering 20% of the target's trajectory (effective occlusion…
Descriptors: Infants, Motion, Eye Movements, Age Differences
Johnson, Scott P.; Slemmer, Jonathan A.; Amso, Dima – Infancy, 2004
A fundamental question of perceptual development concerns how infants come to perceive partly hidden objects as unified across a spatial gap imposed by an occluder. Much is known about the time course of development of perceptual completion during the first several months after birth, as well as some of the visual information that supports unity…
Descriptors: Object Permanence, Eye Movements, Infants, Human Body
Hillenbrand, James M.; Gayvert, Robert T. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
The purpose of this paper is to describe a software package that can be used for performing such routine tasks as controlling listening experiments (e.g., simple labeling, discrimination, sentence intelligibility, and magnitude estimation), recording responses and response latencies, analyzing and plotting the results of those experiments,…
Descriptors: Intervals, Word Recognition, Visual Perception, Sentences
Riner, Phil – Phi Delta Kappan, 2005
Research tells us we can learn complex tasks most easily if they are taught in "small sequential steps." This column is about the small sequential steps that unlocked the powers of digital photography, of portraiture, and of student creativity. The strategies and ideas described in this article came as a result of working with…
Descriptors: Art Education, Photography, Grade 5, Urban Schools
Nardini, Marko; Burgess, Neil; Breckenridge, Kate; Atkinson, Janette – Cognition, 2006
We studied the development of spatial frames of reference in children aged 3-6 years, who retrieved hidden toys from an array of identical containers bordered by landmarks under four conditions. By moving the child and/or the array between presentation and test, we varied the consistency of the hidden toy with (1) the body, and (2) the testing…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Young Children, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology)
Wakefield, Claire E.; Homewood, Judi; Taylor, Alan J. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 2006
Studies of how children who are blind acquire and use language have focused less on cognitive compensations and more on delays in development. Vision is important in the establishment of early communicative patterns, and sighted children regularly use contextual visual information, such as a speaker's gestures and eye gaze, to make sense of speech…
Descriptors: Vision, Nonverbal Communication, Blindness, Auditory Discrimination
Levin, Daniel T.; Banaji, Mahzarin R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2006
Although lightness perception is clearly influenced by contextual factors, it is not known whether knowledge about the reflectance of specific objects also affects their lightness. Recent research by O. H. MacLin and R. Malpass (2003) suggests that subjects label Black faces as darker than White faces, so in the current experiments, an adjustment…
Descriptors: Racial Factors, Visual Perception, Visual Discrimination, Expectation

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