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Diaz, Derek D.; Sims, Valerie K. – High Ability Studies, 2003
The present study examined if spatial knowledge gained from a virtual environment is affected by the spatial ability of the participant, and whether information can be more efficiently acquired and applied to a physical space when participants are given a display featuring both overhead and first-person visual cues. Three spatial training displays…
Descriptors: Cues, Computer Simulation, Spatial Ability, Epistemology
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Dunsworth, Qi; Atkinson, Robert K. – Computers & Education, 2007
Research suggests that students learn better when studying a picture coupled with narration rather than on-screen text in a computer-based multimedia learning environment. Moreover, combining narration with the visual presence of an animated pedagogical agent may also encourage students to process information deeper than narration or on-screen…
Descriptors: Narration, Human Body, Educational Environment, Multimedia Instruction
Epstein, Kenneth; And Others – 1997
This paper discusses the results of a study of 27 college students with deafness that investigated whether cognitive processes are modality dependent in individuals with deafness. The experiment included two separate parts, one composed of shape trials and the other composed of word trials. An initial stimulus was shown on a computer screen for…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Deafness, Encoding (Psychology)
Smith, Corinne R. – 1983
In order to individualize instruction for learning disabled students, tasks should be matched to students' abilities and learning styles. Two types of task modifications include modifying the task content to coincide with what students are ready to learn and modifying task processes and features to match how students prefer to learn. Readiness…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Individualized Instruction, Learning Disabilities
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Taub, Harvey A.; Kline, Gary E. – Educational Gerontology, 1976
Three experiments were performed using unrelated digit materials and prose passages to evaluate whether an auditory or visual presentation of material would be best for an aged population. Data suggests that the choice of modality depends on the particular presentation condition rather than on the type of stimulus materials. (Author)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Aural Learning, Educational Gerontology, Gerontology
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Cormier, William H.; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1976
Two studies investigated the effects of learning modules and classroom lecture on the acquisition of three counseling strategies. In the first study, results indicate that the self-paced module group performed significantly better than the classroom lecture group. In the second study, no significant differences were found. (Author)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Comparative Analysis, Conventional Instruction, Counseling
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Rohwer, William D., Jr.; Harris, Wendy J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1975
The effect of media presentations (oral, print, pictures, and combinations) on prose learning between high socioeconomic status white and low socioeconomic black children is compared and analyzed. (DEP)
Descriptors: Achievement Rating, Black Students, Children, Grade 4
Swalm, James E. – Elementary English, 1974
When studying the question, Do primary students learn better through listening or reading?, the readability of the material used should be considered. (JH)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Learning Modalities, Listening, Listening Comprehension
Scribner, Sylvia – 1988
Much research has focused on cognitive skills in isolation from daily life and from action. However, memory and thinking in daily life are not separate from, but are part of, doing. This study is based on a theoretical framework that encompasses an integrated account of mind in action. This "activity theory" holds that neither mind as such nor…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Style, Experiential Learning, Learning Modalities
Stacks, Don W.; Andersen, Peter A. – 1987
To further the understanding of how the brain operates at the most basic level of interest to human communication theorists, intrapersonal communication, this paper reviews the arguments against the hemispheric dominance theory and for a neurological processing style model of brain functions and then focuses on the impact of the corpus callosum (a…
Descriptors: Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style
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Mehrabian, Albert; Russell, James A. – Environment and Behavior, 1974
Describes a study to develop and cross validate a verbal measure of information rate. This measure should be helpful in assessing the information rate of situations, whether the situations are described verbally, presented pictorally or with audiovisual recordings, or experienced directly by subjects. (Author/MLB)
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Environmental Research, Environmental Standards, Information Theory
Reimankora, L. – Russkij Yazyk za Rubezhom, 1973
Descriptors: Conversational Language Courses, Form Classes (Languages), Language Patterns, Learning Modalities
Braverman, Marc T.; Farley, Frank H. – 1975
Comprehension of film was studied in an ATI (aptitude x treatment interaction) framework which investigated comprehension as a function of the interaction of the stimulation-seeking motive (arousal) and degree of structure in information presented in film. Three levels of organizational coherence of a short film and two levels of the stimulation…
Descriptors: Arousal Patterns, Cognitive Style, Comprehension, Films
Gulkus, Steven P. – 1977
The relationship between conceptual complexity and stimulus saliency was explored in a 3 x 4 factorial design using 144 undergraduates. Levels of complexity were represented by varying the ratio of relevant-to-irrelevant dimensions (1:3, 2:2, and 3:1). The saliency factor varied according to the discriminability between each attribute within…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Comprehension, Concept Formation, Discrimination Learning
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Blank, Marion; And Others – Child Development, 1975
Intra- and crossmodal performance of normal and retarded third-grade readers were compared in a reaction-time task. Results suggest that the demands of stimulus complexity within the visual modality rather than the demands of crossmodal shifting were related to reading ability. (Author/ED)
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Difficulty Level, Elementary School Students, Learning Modalities
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