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Perry, Michael Wolfe – Young Children, 2006
This article focuses on a small experiment initiated by two three-year-old preschool children without the instruction or supervision of a teacher, while playing in the yard. During their playtime, they began to color the blacktop with chalk. They thought of a brilliant idea of pouring water over the chalk drawings and after the water dries up,…
Descriptors: Color, Preschool Children, Preschool Education, Photography
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Durgin, Frank H.; Pelah, Adar; Fox, Laura F.; Lewis, Jed; Kane, Rachel; Walley, Katherine A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Do locomotor after effects depend specifically on visual feedback? In 7 experiments, 116 college students were tested, with closed eyes, at stationary running or at walking to a previewed target after adaptation, with closed eyes, to treadmill locomotion. Subjects showed faster inadvertent drift during stationary running and increased distance…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Experiments, Human Body, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Korner, Christof – Learning and Instruction, 2005
Hierarchical graphs represent relationships between objects (like computer file systems, family trees etc.). Graph nodes represent the objects and interconnecting lines represent the relationships. In two experiments we investigated what concepts are necessary for understanding hierarchical graphs, what misconceptions evolve when some of the…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Misconceptions, Graphs, Concept Formation
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Hinchcliffe, Edward H. – Cell Biology Education, 2005
Cinemicrography--the capture of moving cellular sequences through the microscope--has been influential in revealing the dynamic nature of cellular behavior. One of the more dramatic cellular events is mitosis, the division of sister chromatids into two daughter cells. Mitosis has been extensively studied in a variety of organisms, both…
Descriptors: Cytology, Visual Aids, Video Technology, Laboratory Equipment
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Adler, Scott A.; Orprecio, Jazmine – Developmental Science, 2006
Visual search studies with adults have shown that stimuli that contain a unique perceptual feature pop out from dissimilar distractors and are unaffected by the number of distractors. Studies with very young infants have suggested that they too might exhibit pop-out. However, infant studies have used paradigms in which pop-out is measured in…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Attention Control, Attention, Infants
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Birol, Gulnur; Liu, Shu Q.; Smith, H. David; Hirsch, Penny – Bioscience Education e-Journal, 2006
This paper describes an educational package for use in tertiary level tissue engineering education. Current learning science principles and theory were employed in the design process of these educational tools. Each module started with a challenge statement designed to motivate students and consisted of laboratory exercises centered on the "How…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Laboratories, Engineering, Experiments
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Allen, Michael L.; Kelly-Riley, Diane – Astronomy Education Review, 2005
This article presents results of the first two years of the introduction of a critical thinking (CT) component to standard freshman astronomy lab exercises for nonmajors. The component consists of a series of probing questions folded into the exercises, plus a formal grading rubric. The grading rubric is adapted from the generalized Washington…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Critical Thinking, Science Instruction, College Freshmen
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Gutierrez, Ranier; De la Cruz, Vanesa; Rodriguez-Ortiz, Carlos J.; Bermudez-Rattoni, Federico – Learning & Memory, 2004
The relevance of perirhinal cortical cholinergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission for taste recognition memory and learned taste aversion was assessed by microinfusions of muscarinic (scopolamine), NMDA (AP-5), and AMPA (NBQX) receptor antagonists. Infusions of scopolamine, but not AP5 or NBQX, prevented the consolidation of taste recognition…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Recognition (Psychology), Animals, Primatology
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Brown, Malcolm Watson; Warburton, Elizabeth Clea; Barker, Gareth Robert Isaac; Bashir, Zafar Iqbal – Learning & Memory, 2006
Recognition memory, involving the ability to discriminate between a novel and familiar object, depends on the integrity of the perirhinal cortex (PRH). Glutamate, the main excitatory neurotransmitter in the cortex, is essential for many types of memory processes. Of the subtypes of glutamate receptor, metabotropic receptors (mGluRs) have received…
Descriptors: Integrity, Recognition (Psychology), Biochemistry, Experiments
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Lebel, David; Sidhu, Nishchal; Barkai, Edi; Quinlan, Elizabeth M. – Learning & Memory, 2006
Olfactory discrimination (OD) learning consists of two phases: an initial N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor--sensitive rule-learning phase, followed by an NMDA receptor (NMDAR)--insensitive pair-learning phase. The rule-learning phase is accompanied by changes in the composition and function of NMDARs at synapses in the piriform cortex,…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Discrimination Learning, Neurolinguistics, Conditioning
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Graziano-King, Janine; Smith Cairns, Helen – Journal of Child Language, 2005
Two experiments investigated the acquisition of English comparative adjective forms, "Adj+er" and "more Adj." In Experiment 1, 72 children, four- and seven-years-old, indicated their preferences for the synthetic or periphrastic comparative form for 16 adjectives in a forced-choice judgement task; their responses were compared to those of a group…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Language Processing, Children, Experiments
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Flory, S. Luke; Ingram, Ella L.; Heidinger, Britt J.; Tintjer, Tammy – American Biology Teacher, 2005
Laboratory components of introductory biology college-level courses are becoming increasingly rare. Due to the absence of laboratory funding and time, instructors at all levels are faced with the problem of implementing inquiry-based projects. In this article, the authors present an activity that they developed for the 50-minute discussion period…
Descriptors: Evolution, Inquiry, Undergraduate Study, Plants (Botany)
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Morsella, Ezequiel; Krauss, Robert M. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2005
The origin and functions of the hand and arm gestures that accompany speech production are poorly understood. It has been proposed that gestures facilitate lexical retrieval, but little is known about when retrieval is accompanied by gestural activity and how this activity is related to the semantics of the word to be retrieved. Electromyographic…
Descriptors: Speech, Semantics, Motor Reactions, Language Processing
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Schnur, Tatiana T.; Costa, Albert; Caramazza, Alfonso – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
In two picture-word interference experiments we examined whether phrase boundaries affected how far in advance speakers plan the sounds of words during sentence production. Participants produced sentences of varying lengths (short determiner + noun + verb or long determiner + adjective + noun + verb) while ignoring phonologically related and…
Descriptors: Sentences, Verbs, Nouns, Cognitive Processes
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Longo, Matthew R.; Bertenthal, Bennett I. – Infancy, 2006
Do 9-month-old infants motorically simulate actions they perceive others perform? Two experiments tested whether action observation, like overt reaching, is sufficient to elicit the Piagetian A-not-B error. Infants recovered a toy hidden at location A or observed an experimenter recover the toy. After the toy was hidden at location B, infants in…
Descriptors: Observation, Error Patterns, Infants, Toys
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