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Frischen, Alexandra; Tipper, Steven P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
One component of successful social interactions is joint attention. It is now well established that when a gaze shift is observed, the observer's attention rapidly and automatically orients to the same location in space. It is also established that such attention shifts via gaze are relatively transient and do not evoke subsequent inhibition…
Descriptors: Intervals, Cues, Attention, Memory
Prinzmetal, William; McCool, Christin; Park, Samuel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
The authors propose that there are 2 different mechanisms whereby spatial cues capture attention. The voluntary mechanism is the strategic allocation of perceptual resources to the location most likely to contain the target. The involuntary mechanism is a reflexive orienting response that occurs even when the spatial cue does not indicate the…
Descriptors: Cues, Reaction Time, Spatial Ability, Attention Control
Awh, Edward; Sgarlata, Antoinette Marie; Kliestik, John – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
Models of attentional control usually describe online shifts in control settings that accommodate changing task demands. The current studies suggest that online control over distractor exclusion--a core component of visual selection--can be accomplished without online shifts in top-down settings. Measurements of target discrimination accuracy…
Descriptors: Probability, Cognitive Mapping, Cues, Visual Perception
Berger, Andrea; Henik, Avishai; Rafal, Robert – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
The relation between reflexive and voluntary orienting of visual attention was investigated with 4 experiments: a simple detection task, a localization task, a saccade toward the target task, and a target identification task in which discrimination difficulty was manipulated. Endogenous and exogenous orienting cues were presented in each trial and…
Descriptors: Validity, Task Analysis, Cues, Attention Control
Shah, Amee P.; Baum, Shari R. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
A semantic priming, lexical-decision study was conducted to examine the ability of left- and right-brain damaged individuals to perceive lexical-stress cues and map them onto lexical-semantic representations. Correctly and incorrectly stressed primes were paired with related and unrelated target words to tap implicit processing of lexical prosody.…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Head Injuries, Priming, Language Processing
Burgess, Neil; Spiers, Hugo J.; Paleologou, Eleni – Cognition, 2004
Subjects in a darkroom saw an array of five phosphorescent objects on a circular table and, after a short delay, indicated which object had been moved. During the delay the subject, the table or a phosphorescent landmark external to the array was moved (a rotation about the centre of the table) either alone or together. The subject then had to…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Memory, Cues, Motion
Hartley, Tom; Trinkler, Iris; Burgess, Neil – Cognition, 2004
Geometric alterations to the boundaries of a virtual environment were used to investigate the representations underlying human spatial memory. Subjects encountered a cue object in a simple rectangular enclosure, with distant landmarks for orientation. After a brief delay, during which they were removed from the arena, subjects were returned to it…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Memory, Cues, Geometry
Learmonth, Amy E.; Lamberth, Rebecca; Rovee-Collier, Carolyn – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
Infants first generalize across contexts and cues at 3 months of age in operant tasks but not until 12 months of age in imitation tasks. Three experiments using an imitation task examined whether infants younger than 12 months of age might generalize imitation if conditions were more like those in operant studies. Infants sat on a distinctive mat…
Descriptors: Infants, Imitation, Cues, Context Effect
Keane, Brian P.; Pylyshyn, Zenon W. – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
In a series of five experiments, we investigated whether visual tracking mechanisms utilize prediction when recovering multiple reappearing objects. When all objects abruptly disappeared and reappeared mid-trajectory, it was found that (a) subjects tracked better when objects reappeared at their loci of disappearance than when they reappeared in…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Cues, Cognitive Processes, Object Permanence
Rickard, Timothy C.; Bajic, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Despite earlier evidence that the presence of 2 redundant cues can facilitate activation of a common response, T. C. Rickard and D. Bajic (2004) found no dual-cue facilitation in the case of cued recall, provided that each cue-response association was learned independently. In this study the authors investigated the generality of their results…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Cues, Cognitive Processes, Responses
Rakow, Tim; Newell, Ben R.; Fayers, Kathryn; Hersby, Mette – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
The authors identify and provide an integration of 3 criteria for establishing cue-search hierarchies in inferential judgment. Cues can be ranked by information value according to expected information gain (Bayesian criterion), cue-outcome correlation (correlational criterion), or ecological validity (accuracy criterion). All criteria…
Descriptors: Cues, Inferences, Criteria, Bayesian Statistics
Van Assche, Eva; Grainger, Jonathan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Four lexical decision experiments are reported that use the masked priming paradigm to study the role of letter position information in orthographic processing. In Experiments 1 and 2, superset primes, formed by repetition of 1 or 2 letters of the target (e.g., jusstice-JUSTICE) or by insertion of 1 or 2 unrelated letters (e.g., juastice-JUSTICE),…
Descriptors: Experiments, Language Processing, Morphology (Languages), Reaction Time
Hodsoll, John P.; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
We investigated the effect of contextual cuing (M. M. Chun & Y. Jiang, 1998) within the preview paradigm (D. G. Watson & G. W. Humphreys, 1997). Contextual cuing was shown with a 10-item letter search but not with more crowded 20-item displays. However, contextual learning did occur in a preview procedure in which 10 preview items were followed by…
Descriptors: Cues, Context Effect, Prompting, Visual Learning
Friedman, William J.; Lyon, Thomas D. – Child Development, 2005
In a study of the ability to reconstruct the times of past events, 86 children from 4 to 13 years recalled the times of 2 in-class demonstrations that had occurred 3 months earlier and judged the times of hypothetical events. Many of the abilities needed to reconstruct the times of events were present by 6 years, including the capacity to…
Descriptors: Cues, Children, Age Differences, Time Perspective
Gerken, Louann; Wilson, Rachel; Lewis, William – Journal of Child Language, 2005
Nearly all theories of language development emphasize the importance of distributional cues for segregating words and phrases into syntactic categories like noun, feminine or verb phrase. However, questions concerning whether such cues can be used to the exclusion of referential cues have been debated. Using the headturn preference procedure,…
Descriptors: Cues, Models, Verbs, Grammar

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