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Muuli, Eerik; Tõnisson, Eno; Lepp, Marina; Luik, Piret; Palts, Tauno; Suviste, Reelika; Papli, Kaspar; Säde, Merilin – Education and Information Technologies, 2020
There are thousands of participants in different programming MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) which means thousands of solutions have to be assessed. As it is very time-consuming to assess that amount of solutions manually, using automated assessment is essential. Since task requirements must be strict for the solutions to be automatically…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Programming, Computer Assisted Testing, Visual Stimuli
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Gwinn, O. Scott; Jiang, Fang – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2020
Previous studies have shown that compared to hearing individuals, early deaf individuals allocate relatively more attention to the periphery than central visual field. However, it is not clear whether these two groups also differ in their ability to selectively attend to specific peripheral locations. We examined deaf and hearing participants'…
Descriptors: Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Attention, Visual Stimuli
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Liu, Sisi; Peng, Ming – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2020
Creativity is linked to broad scope of attention, a state or trait that allocates attentional resources over a wide range of perceptual stimuli. According to the attentional priming hypothesis, a mechanism underlying the creativity--attention link is that broad perceptual attention scope primes broad conceptual attention scope--the activation of a…
Descriptors: Attention, Creativity, Hypothesis Testing, Priming
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Zamora, Eliana V.; Vernucci, Santiago; del Valle, Macarena; Introzzi, Isabel; Richard's, María M. – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2020
Different studies indicate that emotions can interfere with the efficacy of inhibitory control. However, understanding this impact requires considering that inhibition is not a unitary construct. Cognitive inhibition is the process responsible for attenuating and resisting the interference of thoughts, representations, and memories that are…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Inhibition, Interference (Learning), Emotional Response
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de la Mora Velasco, Efren; Hirumi, Atsusi – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2020
This review builds on prior reviews by synthesizing thirty studies that examined the effects of background music (BM) on learning from 2008 to 2018. Each study was coded based on key methodological features, BM's characteristics, and reported BM effects on learning (i.e., negative, neutral or positive). Frequencies and percentages were used to…
Descriptors: Music, Auditory Stimuli, Learning, Environmental Influences
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Liao, Ming-Ray; Anderson, Brian A. – Learning & Memory, 2020
Previously reward-associated stimuli persistently capture attention. We attempted to extinguish this attentional bias through a reversal learning procedure where the high-value color changed unexpectedly. Attentional priority shifted during training in favor of the currently high-value color, although a residual bias toward the original high-value…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Rewards, Color, Task Analysis
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Barcelos Nomicos, Laura; Jacobs, Kenneth W.; Locey, Matthew L. – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2020
Human decision making is partly determined by the verbal stimuli involved in a choice. Verbal stimuli that may be particularly relevant to human decision making are the words "should" and "like," whereby "should" is presumably associated with what one ought to choose, and "like" is presumably associated with…
Descriptors: Decision Making Skills, Verbal Stimuli, Money Management, Delay of Gratification
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Gordon, Andrew; Geddert, Raphael; Hogeveen, Jeremy; Krug, Marie K.; Obhi, Sukhvinder; Solomon, Marjorie – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2020
Research has observed evidence for both "hypo"-(supposedly due to a broken mirror neuron system) and "hyper"-(thought to be the result of deficits in adaptive control) imitation in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This work sought to adjudicate between these findings using an automatic imitation (AI) paradigm with the novel…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Imitation, Neurological Impairments
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Liu, Zejun; Wang, Yujuan; Guo, Chunyan – Learning & Memory, 2020
It is widely accepted that associative recognition can be supported by familiarity through integrating more than two stimuli into a unit, but there are still three unsolved questions: (1) how unitization affects recollection-based associative recognition; (2) whether it is necessary to match the level of unitization (LOU) between original and…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Recognition (Psychology), Familiarity, Correlation
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Hochhauser, Michal; Aran, Adi; Grynszpan, Ouriel – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2018
Visual attention of adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) was assessed using a change blindness paradigm. Twenty-five adolescents with ASD aged 12-18 years and 25 matched typically developing (TD) adolescents viewed 36 pairs of digitized real-world images. Each pair of images was displayed in a "flicker paradigm" whereby a…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Adolescents, Visual Perception
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Méary, David; Jaggie, Carole; Pascalis, Olivier – Language Learning, 2018
Visual and auditory information jointly contribute to face categorization processes in humans, and gender is a socially relevant multisensory category specified by faces and voices that is detected early in infancy. We used an eye tracker to study how gender coherence in audio and visual modalities influence face scanning in 9- to 12-month-old…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Gender Differences, Adults
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Tang, Ping; Yuen, Ivan; Demuth, Katherine; Rattanasone, Nan Xu – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Contrastive focus, conveyed by prosodic cues, marks important information. Studies have shown that 6-year-olds learning English and Japanese can use contrastive focus during online sentence comprehension: focus used in a "contrastive context" facilitates the identification of a target referent (speeding up processing), whereas focus used…
Descriptors: Mandarin Chinese, Suprasegmentals, Intonation, Prediction
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Toffalini, Enrico; Marsura, Mara; Garcia, Ricardo Basso; Cornoldi, Cesare – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2019
Successful reading demands the ability to combine visual-phonological information into a single representation and is associated with an efficient short-term memory. Reading disability may consequently involve an impaired working memory binding of visual and phonological information. The present study proposes two span tasks for assessing…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Reading Difficulties, Dyslexia, Associative Learning
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Ünal, Ercenur; Papafragou, Anna – Language Learning and Development, 2019
Three experiments explored how well children recognize events from different types of visual experience: either by directly seeing an event or by indirectly experiencing it from post-event visual evidence. In Experiment 1, 4- and 5- to 6-year-old Turkish-speaking children (n = 32) successfully recognized events through either direct or indirect…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Visual Stimuli, Experience, Recall (Psychology)
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Schneps, Matthew H.; Chen, Chen; Pomplun, Marc; Wang, Jiahui; Crosby, Anne D.; Kent, Kevin – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2019
People who are practiced in using text-to-speech can drive listening speeds to surprisingly high limits. Here, we investigate the extent to which people who are otherwise untrained, with and without dyslexia, can increase their reading speed when forcibly accelerated visual or auditory presentations are used in isolation or in tandem. The…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Dyslexia, Reading Rate
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