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Peer reviewedSalome, Richard A.; Szeto, Janet W. – Studies in Art Education, 1976
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Freehand Drawing, Perception Tests, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedGilmore, Rick O.; Johnson, Mark H. – Cognition, 1997
Investigated the nature of spatial representations underlying simple visually guided actions with 3- and 7-month-old infants. Saccades in older infants were executed within body-centered spatial coordinates that account for intervening eye movements, whereas younger infants responded according to the target's retinocentric locations without…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Infants, Perceptual Development, Psychomotor Skills
Peer reviewedSmeets, Paul M.; Striefel, Sebastian – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1988
Four experiments investigated time-delay discrimination training in improving the visual discrimination performance of 16 impulsive kindergarten children. Time delay of distinctive-feature prompts without self-monitoring did not produce learning. The added requirement of self-monitoring nonwait responses led to dramatically improved performance,…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Conceptual Tempo, Cues, Performance
Peer reviewedSmeets, Paul M.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Examined reversal of emergent simple discriminations through stimulus contiguity. In experiment one, Baseline and Reversal phases were positive for most children. Experiments two through four examined protocol aspects that possibly contributed to successful reversal of the form discrimination; found that reversed discrimination usually was a…
Descriptors: Color, Discriminant Analysis, Discrimination Learning, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedAdams, Russell J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Newborns were habituated to white squares of varying size and luminance and retested with colored squares for recovery of habituation. Newborns could discriminate yellow-green from white in large squares, but not in small squares. They could not discriminate blue, blue-green, or purple from white. Results suggest newborns have little…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Color, Discrimination Learning, Habituation
Peer reviewedMorrongiello, Barbara A.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Studied spatial knowledge in fully blind versus fully sighted four- to nine-year olds. Found that blind children performed as well as sighted on all tasks but one. (ETB)
Descriptors: Blindness, Children, Cognitive Mapping, Encoding (Psychology)
Peer reviewedGergely, Gyorgy; And Others – Cognition, 1995
In a visual habituation experiment, infants watched a circle (the "agent") move toward another circle by jumping over a barrier or jumping without a barrier present, and then watched a circle move straight to another circle. Found that infants were able to identify the agent's spatial goal and to interpret the agent's actions causally in…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Foreign Countries, Habituation, Infants
Peer reviewedColombo, John; And Others – Child Development, 1991
Four experiments tested four month olds on visual discrimination tasks. As the time allotted to solve these problems was shortened, infants who looked at stimuli for a short amount of time performed better than other infants, indicating that performance superiority was attributable to speed of processing. (BC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Eye Fixations, Individual Differences, Infants
Peer reviewedBertenthal, Bennett I.; Bradbury, Anne – Developmental Psychology, 1992
Assessed 13- and 20-week-olds infants' discrimination between shearing stimuli, in which columns of dots move vertically on a screen at different velocities, and foil stimuli, in which all dots move at the same velocity. Results revealed the threshold levels of dot velocity in shearing stimuli at which discrimination occurred. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Infants, Motion, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedEbeling, Karen S.; Gelman, Susan A. – Child Development, 1994
Three experiments examined how flexibly two- to four-year-old children use the words "big" and "little" in normative, perceptual, and functional contexts. Results showed that children switched easily from a normative context but made errors when asked to switch to a normative context. (MDM)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Childhood Attitudes, Classification, Context Effect
Peer reviewedSpencer, Ian; Krizel, Peter – Child Development, 1994
Children, ages 9 to 13 years, made judgments of proportion with a variety of graphical elements in 2 experiments. A characteristic pattern of over- and underestimation was observed; this pattern was also present, but previously unnoticed, in judgments made by adults. (MDM)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedvan Loosbroek, Erik; Smitsman, Ad. W. – Developmental Psychology, 1990
Infants were tested at 5, 8, and 13 months of age for numerosity perception. Subjects observed displayed figures on a screen moving at constant speed with irregular trajectories and occasional occlusions. Results demonstrated that discrimination of units, and not of characteristic patterns, underlies numerosity perception. (BC)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Infants, Longitudinal Studies, Pattern Recognition
Peer reviewedKinoshita, Sachiko – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1998
Suggests that the role of phonology may be more limited when reading text in Japanese relative to English, and that this difference is not due to variations in orthographic depth. Proposes key factors are the greater visual discriminability of kanji words under degraded conditions and the less important role of word order as a syntactic cue. (SR)
Descriptors: Japanese, Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedSoken, Nelson H.; Pick, Anne D. – Child Development, 1999
A preferential looking procedure was used to investigate 7-month-olds' perception of positive and negative affective facial expressions in which a single vocal expression was concordant or discordant with the videotaped facial expression. Results indicated that 7-month-olds discriminated among happy, interested, angry, and sad expressions.…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Emotional Development, Facial Expressions, Infant Behavior
Melgire, Manuela; Ragot, Richard; Samson, Severine; Penney, Trevor B.; Meck, Warren H.; Pouthas, Viviane – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Patients with unilateral (left or right) medial temporal lobe lesions and normal control (NC) volunteers participated in two experiments, both using a duration bisection procedure. Experiment 1 assessed discrimination of auditory and visual signal durations ranging from 2 to 8 s, in the same test session. Patients and NC participants judged…
Descriptors: Patients, Neurological Impairments, Auditory Discrimination, Visual Discrimination

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