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Mondloch, Catherine J.; Dobson, Kate S.; Parsons, Julie; Maurer, Daphne – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
Children are nearly as sensitive as adults to some cues to facial identity (e.g., differences in the shape of internal features and the external contour), but children are much less sensitive to small differences in the spacing of facial features. To identify factors that contribute to this pattern, we compared 8-year-olds' sensitivity to spacing…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Spatial Ability, Cues
Reed, Catherine L.; Grubb, Jefferson D.; Steele, Cleophus – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
This study explored whether hand location affected spatial attention. The authors used a visual covert-orienting paradigm to examine whether spatial attention mechanisms--location prioritization and shifting attention--were supported by bimodal, hand-centered representations of space. Placing 1 hand next to a target location, participants detected…
Descriptors: Cues, Needs Assessment, Spatial Ability, Attention
Landa, Rebecca J.; Goldberg, Melissa C. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2005
This study examined language and executive functions (EF) in high-functioning school-aged individuals with autism and individually matched controls. Relationships between executive, language, and social functioning were also examined. Participants with autism exhibited difficulty on measures of expressive grammar, figurative language, planning,…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Interpersonal Competence, Autism, Grammar
Colom, Roberto; Rebollo, Irene; Palacios, Antonio; Juan-Espinosa, Manuel; Kyllonen, Patrick C. – Intelligence, 2004
This article analyzes if working memory (WM) is especially important to understand "g." WM comprises the functions of focusing attention, conscious rehearsal, and transformation and mental manipulation of information, while "g" reflects the component variance that is common to all tests of ability. The centrality of WM in individual differences in…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Intelligence, Individual Differences, Cognitive Processes
Ono, Fuminori; Jiang, Yuhong; Kawahara, Jun-ichiro – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Contextual cuing refers to the facilitation of performance in visual search due to the repetition of the same displays. Whereas previous studies have focused on contextual cuing within single-search trials, this study tested whether 1 trial facilitates visual search of the next trial. Participants searched for a T among Ls. In the training phase,…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Predictor Variables, Context Effect
Watson, Derrick G.; Maylor, Elizabeth A.; Bruce, Lucy A. M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
The enumeration of small numbers of objects (approximately 4) proceeds rapidly, accurately, and with little effort via a process termed subitization. Four experiments examined whether it was possible to subitize the number of features rather than objects present in a display. Overall, the findings showed that when features are presented randomly…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes, Spatial Ability, Computation
Tommasi, Luca; Thinus-Blanc, Catherine – Learning & Memory, 2004
Rats were trained to search for a food reward hidden under sawdust in the center of a square-shaped enclosure designed to force orientation on the basis of the overall geometry of the environment. They were then tested in a number of enclosures differing in shape and in size (rectangular-, double-side square-, and equilateral triangle-shaped…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Animals, Spatial Ability
Akirav, Irit; Kozenicky, Maya; Tal, Dadi; Sandi, Carmen; Venero, Cesar; Richter-Levin, Gal – Learning & Memory, 2004
Emotionally charged experiences alter memory storage via the activation of hormonal systems. Previously, we have shown that compared with rats trained for a massed spatial learning task in the water maze in warm water (25 degrees C), animals that were trained in cold water (19 degrees C) performed better and showed higher levels of the stress…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Animals, Task Analysis, Memory
Verbitsky, Miguel; Yonan, Amanda L.; Malleret, Gael; Kandel, Eric R.; Gilliam, T. Conrad; Pavlidis, Paul – Learning & Memory, 2004
We have carried out a global survey of age-related changes in mRNA levels in the 57BL/6NIA mouse hippocampus and found a difference in the hippocampal gene expression profile between 2-month-old young mice and 15-month-old middle-aged mice correlated with an age-related cognitive deficit in hippocampal-based explicit memory formation. Middle-aged…
Descriptors: Profiles, Animals, Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Rossato, Janine I.; Medina, Jorge H.; Izquierdo, Ivan; Cammarota, Martin; Bevilaqua, Lia R. M. – Learning & Memory, 2006
Nonreinforced retrieval can cause extinction and/or reconsolidation, two processes that affect subsequent retrieval in opposite ways. Using the Morris water maze task we show that, in the rat, repeated nonreinforced expression of spatial memory causes extinction, which is unaffected by inhibition of protein synthesis within the CA1 region of the…
Descriptors: Memory, Genetics, Inhibition, Spatial Ability
Ohno, Masuo; Tseng, Wilbur; Silva, Alcino J.; Disterhoft, John F. – Learning & Memory, 2005
Little is known about signaling mechanisms underlying temporal associative learning. Here, we show that mice with a targeted point mutation that prevents autophosphorylation of [alpha]CaMKII ([alpha]CaMKII[superscript T286A]) learn trace eyeblink conditioning normally. This forms a sharp contrast to the severely impaired spatial learning in the…
Descriptors: Conditioning, Animals, Associative Learning, Eye Movements
Yuan, Kun; Steedle, Jeffrey; Shavelson, Richard; Alonzo, Alicia; Oppezzo, Marily – Educational Research Review, 2006
A review of the history of working memory (WM) studies finds that the concept of WM evolved from short-term memory to a multi-component system. Comparison between contemporary WM models reveals: (1) consensus that the content of WM includes not only task-relevant information, but also task-irrelevant information; (2) consensus that WM consists of…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Science Achievement, Short Term Memory, Psychometrics
Flombaum, Jonathan I.; Scholl, Brian J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Meaningful visual experience requires computations that identify objects as the same persisting individuals over time, motion, occlusion, and featural change. This article explores these computations in the tunnel effect: When an object moves behind an occluder, and then an object later emerges following a consistent trajectory, observers…
Descriptors: Computation, Color, Motion, Memory
Jack, Jordynn – College English, 2006
The author examines how chronotopes--a term M. M. Bakhtin used to describe space-time relationships in literature--also characterize rhetorical arguments. She uses a case study of a series of debates about genetically modified foods (GMFs) in Canada to illustrate how chronotopes shape arguments along ideological lines. In particular, she suggests…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ideology, Biotechnology, Rhetorical Criticism
Bart, Orit; Hajami, Dov; Bar-Haim, Yair – Infant and Child Development, 2007
The present study assessed the relations between basic motor abilities in kindergarten and scholastic, social, and emotional adaptation in the transition to formal schooling. Seventy-one five-year-old kindergarten children were administered a battery of standard assessments of basic motor functions. A year later, children's adjustment to school…
Descriptors: Student Adjustment, Emotional Adjustment, Kindergarten, Psychomotor Skills

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