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Eisen, Mitchell L.; Williams, T'awna; Jones, Jennifer; Ying, Rebecca – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
This experiment was designed to examine how viewing conditions could affect witnesses' vulnerability to suggestive influence. It was predicted that when the encoding conditions were stronger, accurate witnesses would be less likely to shift their decisions when prompted to reexamine the lineup, and that confirming feedback would effectively…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Observation, Crime, Criminals
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Kibbe, Melissa M.; Applin, Jessica B. – Child Development, 2022
Two experiments examined the development of the ability to encode, maintain, and update integrated representations of occluded objects' locations and featural identities in working memory across toddlerhood. Sixty-eight 28- to 40-month-old US toddlers (13 Asian or Pacific Islander, 6 Black, 48 White, 1 multiracial; 40 girls; tested between…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Short Term Memory, Visual Perception, Child Development
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Schultz, Heidrun; Sommer, Tobias; Peters, Jan – Learning & Memory, 2022
During associative retrieval, the brain reinstates neural representations that were present during encoding. The human medial temporal lobe (MTL), with its subregions hippocampus (HC), perirhinal cortex (PRC), and parahippocampal cortex (PHC), plays a central role in neural reinstatement. Previous studies have given compelling evidence for…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Word Recognition, Recall (Psychology), Cognitive Processes
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King, Pete – American Journal of Play, 2022
The author seeks to expand the notion of the "play cycle," first introduced in 1998, to include the "functional cycle," with its "perceptual cue," touted by Jakob von Uexküll. He also discusses Simon Nicholson's theory of "loose parts" and James J. Gibson's notion of "affordances." He outlines the…
Descriptors: Play, Cues, Affordances, Preschool Education
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Daniela Olea-Ibarra; Christian Hartmann; Maria Bannert – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2025
Background: Enjoyment and epistemic emotions are essential in education as they drive learners to actively and persistently engage with learning material. Augmented Reality (hereinafter referred to as AR) is an emerging educational tool that offers unique opportunities for immersive learning experiences. By incorporating AR into the learning…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Positive Attitudes, Computer Simulation, Active Learning
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Muzaffer Özgü Bulut; Ayse Akarsu; Ersoy Karabay – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2025
The paper presents research conducted among Turkish primary school classroom teachers regarding their personal and professional views about creating and using KeKeÇa body music games as educational tools. The core principles of the KeKeÇa body music approach -- embodiment, play orientation and arts integration -- are increasingly recognised as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
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Zubairu Sani Abdulkadir – Indonesian Journal of English Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics, 2025
The study focused on the effects of the technology-based auditorykinesthetic strategy on reading comprehension of Primary III pupils in Kaduna-South, Nigeria. The objective of the study was to determine how the effects of technology-based auditory-kinesthetic instruction improve pupils' reading comprehension for reading speed by fostering critical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Technology Uses in Education, Auditory Stimuli, Kinesthetic Methods
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Nurit Viesel-Nordmeyer; Patrick Lemaire – Journal of Numerical Cognition, 2025
We examined how different types of negative emotional states (anger, disgust, sadness) influence arithmetic performance, and whether this influence is modulated by the types of arithmetic operations and moderated by adults' age. Younger and older adults verified addition and multiplication problems that were superimposed on emotionally negative…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Negative Attitudes, Young Adults, Older Adults
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Michael Gazzanigo; Alexa Quesnel; Catalina Roldan; Xiao Yang – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
Cognitive effects of cellphone dependency among young adults have garnered increasing research attention. While cellphones have been identified as a distractor in daily tasks, related psychological processes remain unclear. As a potential mechanism underlying those effects of cellphones, excessive working memory (WM) load has not yet been well…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time
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Shi, Rushen; Legrand, Camille; Brandenberger, Anna – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2020
Previous research suggests that toddlers can rely on distributional cues in the input to track adjacent and nonadjacent grammatical dependencies. It remains unclear whether toddlers understand the hierarchical phrase structures that determine the corresponding grammatical dependencies. We addressed this question by testing toddlers on two…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Cues, Linguistic Input, Grammar
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Zohrabi, Mohammad; Dobakhti, Leila; Pour, Elnaz Mohammad – Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research, 2019
Semiotics as a broad field of study encompasses Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL). SFL has paved the way for Multimodality which is the study of different sources of meaning. This study was conducted to analyze the visual sources of meaning in children's storybooks on the basis of what Kress and van Leeuwen (2006) developed and called visual…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Books, Semiotics, Visual Stimuli
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Kirkham, Natasha Z.; Rea, Michaela; Osborne, Tamsin; White, Hayely; Mareschal, Denis – Developmental Psychology, 2019
The current study investigates whether informative, mutually redundant audiovisual cues support better performance in a category learning paradigm. Research suggests that, under some conditions, redundant multisensory cues supports better learning, when compared with unisensory cues. This was examined systematically across two experiments. In…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Cues, Auditory Stimuli, Visual Stimuli
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Xie, Heping; Mayer, Richard E.; Wang, Fuxing; Zhou, Zongkui – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2019
Providing single-modality cueing (either visual cueing or auditory cueing) in multimedia lessons does not consistently improve learning outcomes. In 3 eye-tracking experiments, some students learned an onscreen lesson with an oral explanation of graphics and then took a posttest on the material (no cues group). Across all 3 experiments, students…
Descriptors: Multimedia Instruction, Prompting, Visual Stimuli, Auditory Stimuli
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Solares, Leslie; Fryling, Mitch J. – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2019
A large amount of learning occurs through the observation of stimulus-stimulus relations. One procedure that involves this sort of learning is the stimulus-pairing observation procedure (SPOP). The current study involves a systematic replication of Byrne, Rehfeldt, and Aguirre (2014). Tests for the emergence of tact and listener relations were…
Descriptors: Observation, Children, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Konishi, Haruka; Brezack, Natalie; Golinkoff, Roberta Michnick; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy – Grantee Submission, 2019
Infants appear to progress from universal to language-specific event perception. In Japanese, two different verbs describe a person crossing a "bounded ground" (e.g., street) versus an unbounded ground (e.g., field) while in English, the same verb -- "crossing" -- describes both events. Interestingly, Japanese "and"…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Processes, Verbs, Japanese
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