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Peer reviewedBhatt, Ramesh S.; Bertin, Evelin – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Two experiments examined whether infants are sensitive to holistic combinations of line junctions in 2-D images that adults use to derive overall 3-D structure. Results suggested that 3-month-olds are sensitive to holistic combinations of line junctions that adults use to derive 3-D information but also selectively attend to these 3-D cues in…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Habituation
Peer reviewedKowal, Philip B. – Science Teacher, 2001
Uses different illustrations with simple line drawings in the word "QUIZ" as clues for students prior to taking tests. (YDS)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Creativity, Cues, Geology
Peer reviewedDelespaul, Philippe A. E. G.; Reis, Harry T.; DeVries, Marten W. – Social Indicators Research, 2004
How can we enhance activation? Studying should be a challenging, yet rewarding activity for students who intend to graduate. The Flow theory (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990, 1997) predicts that differential levels of perceived challenge and skill (flow) are related to optimized mental states and increased activation. However, the influence of concurrent…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Undergraduate Students, Social Environment, Statistical Analysis
Raman, Lakshmi; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2005
The authors conducted 4 studies suggesting that children attribute different modes of transmission to genetic disorders and contagious illnesses. Study 1 presented preschoolers through 5th graders and adults with "switched-at-birth" scenarios for various disorders. Study 2 presented preschoolers with the same disorders but used contagion links in…
Descriptors: Communicable Diseases, Cues, Genetics, Diseases
Robin, Christelle; Toussaint, Lucette; Blandin, Yannick; Vinter, Annie – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2004
This study aimed at supporting the specificity of learning hypothesis, when aiming was based on internal cues, as directing the hand toward a "self-defined" target location. Participants practiced modest (20 trials) or intensive (720 trials) training with visual and proprioceptive information or proprioceptive information only. Pretests and…
Descriptors: Cues, Sensory Integration, Psychomotor Skills, Pretests Posttests
Marsh, Elizabeth J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Generation is thought to enhance both item-specific and relational processing of generated targets as compared with read words (M. A. McDaniel & P. J. Waddill, 1990). Generation facilitates encoding of the cue-target relation and sometimes boosts encoding of relations across list items. Of interest is whether generation can also increase the…
Descriptors: Memory, Cues, Association (Psychology), Experimental Psychology
Nielsen, Mark – Developmental Psychology, 2006
The present work documents how the logic of a model's demonstration and the communicative cues that the model provides interact with age to influence how children engage in social learning. Children at ages 12, 18, and 24 months (n = 204) watched a model open a series of boxes. Twelve-month-old subjects only copied the specific actions of the…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Modeling (Psychology), Age Differences, Socialization
Chou, Pak Hei Benedito; Wister, Andrew V. – Canadian Journal on Aging, 2005
Drawing from the health belief model, cues to action have been theorized to influence health behaviours; however, few studies have examined these constructs explicitly. This study investigated the relationship between information cues to action and exercise self-care. It was hypothesized that reading about illness information, knowing about…
Descriptors: Cues, Information Seeking, Chronic Illness, Health Education
Singer, Murray – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
This study inspected the processes of verifying the current discourse constituent against the referents that it passively cues during reading. It seemed plausible that, after understanding "The customer ate pancakes," the processes of fully understanding "The waiter implied that the customer ate eggs" might resemble those of intentionally…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Cues, Sentences, Language Processing
Van Dyke, Julie A.; McElree, Brian – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
The role of interference effects in sentence processing has recently begun to receive attention, however whether these effects arise during encoding or retrieval remains unclear. This paper draws on basic memory research to help distinguish these explanations and reports data from an experiment that manipulates the possibility for retrieval…
Descriptors: Interference (Language), Sentences, Memory, Comprehension
Lamy, Dominique; Leber, Andrew; Egeth, Howard E – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
Attentional allocation in feature-search mode (W. F. Bacon & H. E. Egeth, 1994) is thought to be solely determined by top-down factors, with no role for stimulus-driven salience. The authors reassessed this conclusion using variants of the spatial cuing and rapid serial visual presentation paradigms developed by C. L. Folk and colleagues (C. L.…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis
Tehan, Gerald; Humphreys, Michael S.; Tolan, Georgina Anne; Pitcher, Cameron – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Cued recall with an extralist cue poses a challenge for contemporary memory theory in that there is a need to explain how episodic and semantic information are combined. A parallel activation and intersection approach proposes one such means by assuming that an experimental cue will elicit its preexisting semantic network and a context cue will…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Semantics, Memory, Language Processing
Yang, Lee-Xieng; Lewandowsky, Stephan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
The authors present 2 experiments that establish the presence of knowledge partitioning in perceptual categorization. Many participants learned to rely on a context cue, which did not predict category membership but identified partial boundaries, to gate independent partial categorization strategies. When participants partitioned their knowledge,…
Descriptors: Classification, Perception, Cues, Psychological Studies
Lagnado, David A.; Sloman, Steven – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Can people learn causal structure more effectively through intervention rather than observation? Four studies used a trial-based learning paradigm in which participants obtained probabilistic data about a causal chain through either observation or intervention and then selected the causal model most likely to have generated the data. Experiment 1…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Observation, Intervention, Causal Models
Wahlberg, Timothy; Magliano, Joseph P. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2004
This study assessed whether high functioning readers with autism are capable of drawing on prior knowledge during reading. Readers with autism and matched normal readers read ambiguous texts that described well-known historical events. The presence of an informative or noninformative title and primer texts that explicitly described the referenced…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Cues, Autism, Reading Comprehension

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