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Freed, Jeff – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
In working with right-brained or visual spatial children for the past 20 years, the author has noticed that they all learn in a similar manner. He has also noticed that a high percentage of gifted children are visual spatial learners. The more visual spatial a child is, the higher the potential for school difficulties. Since most teachers are…
Descriptors: Gifted, Spatial Ability, Visual Stimuli, Teaching Methods
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Weber, Bernd; Wellmer, Jorg; Reuber, Markus; Mormann, Florian; Weis, Susanne; Urbach, Horst; Ruhlmann, Jurgen; Elger, Christian E.; Fernandez, Guillen – Brain, 2006
It is well recognized that the incidence of atypical language lateralization is increased in patients with focal epilepsy. The hypothesis that shifts in language dominance are particularly likely when epileptic lesions are located in close vicinity to the so-called language-eloquent areas rather than in more remote brain regions such as the…
Descriptors: Patients, Pathology, Language Acquisition, Epilepsy
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Singleton, Chris; Henderson, Lisa-Marie – London Review of Education, 2006
This article reviews current knowledge about how the visual system recognizes letters and words, and the impact on reading when parts of the visual system malfunction. The physiology of eye and brain places important constraints on how we process text, and the efficient organization of the neurocognitive systems involved is not inherent but…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Dyslexia, Physiology, Visual Perception
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Francis, Alexander L.; Driscoll, Courtney – Brain and Language, 2006
We examined the effect of perceptual training on a well-established hemispheric asymmetry in speech processing. Eighteen listeners were trained to use a within-category difference in voice onset time (VOT) to cue talker identity. Successful learners (n = 8) showed faster response times for stimuli presented only to the left ear than for those…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Time, Cues, Auditory Training
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Bakker, Dirk J.; Van Strien, Jan W.; Licht, Robert; Smit-Glaude, Sietsia W. D. – Annals of Dyslexia, 2007
Cognition-related brain responses to meaningful and meaningless figures were registered in 5-year-old kindergarten children who either had been subtyped as being at-risk of developing an L- or P-type dyslexia (LAL versus LAP) or who were not at-risk. While identifying, naming, or categorizing pictures, event-related potentials (ERP) were…
Descriptors: Semantics, Learning Modules, Kindergarten, Etiology
Healy, Jane M. – 1994
Noting that understanding a child's brain and the way it develops is the key to understanding learning, this book explores the relationship between brain physiology and children's learning processes. The book first translates the most current scientific theories on nervous-system development into practical information for parents. It then details…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Children
Kaderavek, Joan N.; And Others – 1992
This study measured unilateral, tachistoscopic naming reaction times of 30 normal and 30 reading-disordered children (mean age of 9.3 years) to objects representing two levels of picture vocabulary age. Reading disabled subjects are enrolled in the Reading Center, a diagnostic and treatment program for disabled readers at Bowling Green State…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Elementary Secondary Education, Etiology, Neurological Organization
Geske, Joel – 1992
Right brain and left brain dominant people process information differently and need different techniques to learn how to become more creative. Various exercises can help students take advantage of both sides of their brains. Students must feel comfortable and unthreatened to reach maximal creativity, and a positive personal relationship with…
Descriptors: Advertising, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Class Activities, Creative Thinking
Stacks, Don W.; Melson, William H. – 1987
Research shows that information received by one brain hemisphere (e.g., auditory messages entering the right ear) is processed and transferred to the other, interpretation being a combination of right and left brain processing, with high intensity messages shifting control from the left to the right brain. If information is received by one…
Descriptors: Advertising, Auditory Discrimination, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Communication Research
Miller, Maryrita G., Ed. – 1989
This symposium was designed to promote the formation of an instructional system that would incorporate the best instructional methodologies. Four papers were presented, each dealing with an acknowledged approach to teaching. The first paper emphasizes the importance of effective curriculum design, a facet of direct instruction that assists…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Style, Concept Formation, Cooperative Learning
Clark, Barbara – 1988
Data on the development of intelligence and the concept of giftedness are interpreted for use in the classroom and are applied to the development of strategies to optimize learning. The Integrative Education Model is introduced, with its purpose of empowering the learner physically, emotionally, cognitively, and intuitively. The teacher's role is…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Albert, Elaine – 1990
Testimony presented at a congressional hearing on illiteracy (March 1986) indicated that good readers use their myelinated corpus callosum fibers (which connect the left and right hemispheres of the brain) at millisecond speeds to coordinate the two brain hemispheres. Students taught using the whole-word recognition method (also called the…
Descriptors: Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Elementary Education, Learning Problems
Flaitz, Jim – 1986
Today's tests of intelligence are largely unchanged over the past 70 to 80 years, despite substantial changes in the way intelligence is conceptualized. The history of intelligence testing reveals that much more has been done to perfect the measurement of traits that are static and immutable than has been done to make or keep intelligence tests…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Measurement, Diagnostic Tests
Obrzut, John E.; And Others – 1987
This study used cued dichotic listening to investigate differences in language lateralization among right-handed (control), left handed, bilingual, and learning disabled children. Subjects (N=60) ranging in age from 7-13 years were administered a consonant-vowel-consonant dichotic paradigm with three experimental conditions (free recall, directed…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Bilingual Students, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Elementary Education
Johansen, Kjeld – 1988
Sophisticated neurological research shows that early problems with auditory perception can result in long-range negative effects for the linguistic processes in general, and such long-range effects must be assumed to be correlated with induced degenerative changes in the auditory system and perhaps in the brain's linguistic sector. This research…
Descriptors: Audiometric Tests, Auditory Evaluation, Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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