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Fan, Judith E.; Yamins, Daniel L. K.; Turk-Browne, Nicholas B. – Cognitive Science, 2018
Production and comprehension have long been viewed as inseparable components of language. The study of vision, by contrast, has centered almost exclusively on comprehension. Here we investigate drawing--the most basic form of visual production. How do we convey concepts in visual form, and how does refining this skill, in turn, affect recognition?…
Descriptors: Vision, Freehand Drawing, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Recognition (Psychology)
Boroson, Barbara – Educational Leadership, 2018
Sketchnoting--a method of recording ideas visually as one reads or listens to information that's popular in the tech world--is finding its way into K-12 education as a technique to help engagement and comprehension. Given that students on the autism spectrum struggle with comprehending and retaining information, sketchnoting might help some of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Teaching Methods
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Brodeur, Darlene A.; Stewart, Jillian; Dawkins, Tamara; Burack, Jacob A. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2018
The findings are evidence that persons with ASD benefit more than typically developing (TD) persons from spatial framing cues in focusing their attention on a visual target. Participants were administered a forced-choice task to assess visual filtering. A target stimulus was presented on a screen and flanker stimuli were presented simultaneously…
Descriptors: Children, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Autism, Attention
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Gallagher, Michael; Hackett, Abigail; Procter, Lisa; Scott, Fiona – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2018
This article explores how close attention to sound can help one to rethink literacy in early childhood education. Through an analysis of text, audio, video, and photographic data from a sound walk undertaken with a parent and a child, we make two arguments. First, contrary to skills-based approaches that abstract literacy from context, we show how…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Preschool Children
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Supakata, Nuta – Applied Environmental Education and Communication, 2018
The aim of this study was to explore the application of recycling bins to improve waste separation practices of undergraduate students from the Department of Environmental Science in the Faculty of Science at Chulalongkorn University. Bin monsters, waste separation bins shaped like monsters, were created by 11 undergraduate students in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Recycling, Undergraduate Students, Student Behavior
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Désiron, Juliette C.; de Vries, Erica; Bartel, Anna N.; Varahamurti, Nalini – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2018
Background and Aim: The effects of text cohesion and added pictures on acquired knowledge have been heavily studied each in isolation. Furthermore, studies on the effects of specific characteristics of pictures, whether facilitating or hindering, are scarce. Schnotz's ITCP Model (2014) allows to formulate hypotheses regarding the combined effect…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Pictorial Stimuli, Knowledge Level, Scientific Literacy
Kot, Mehtap; Terzioglu, Nesime Kübra; Aktas, Burcu; Yikmis, Ahmet – Online Submission, 2018
This research was carried out in order to establish a general opinion on the effect of the teaching technique, which is referred to as the Touch Math, on the academic achievement of special needs students in mathematics courses. To this end, graduate thesis, doctoral dissertation and articles, which were made between 1990-2017, and which have…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Special Needs Students, Mathematics Achievement
Mitchell, Kyle Robert – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Recent studies posit that deficits in emotion regulation may lead to increased negative emotional experience in schizophrenia. While individuals with schizophrenia evidence a number of abnormalities in emotion regulation, it is unclear whether these deficits are discrete or related; furthermore, the mechanisms underlying these deficits are not…
Descriptors: Attention, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, Schizophrenia
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Root, Jenny R.; Knight, Victoria F.; Mims, Pamela J. – Career Development and Transition for Exceptional Individuals, 2017
Instruction in academic core content provides students with moderate to severe disabilities a full educational opportunity that promotes current and future options in the community and can complement acquisition of daily living skills. However, high school teachers face many challenges in balancing instructional priorities given the mission to…
Descriptors: Severe Disabilities, High Schools, Secondary School Teachers, Instructional Design
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Di Giorgio, Elisa; Lunghi, Marco; Simion, Francesca; Vallortigara, Giorgio – Developmental Science, 2017
Self-propelled motion is a powerful cue that conveys information that an object is animate. In this case, animate refers to an entity's capacity to initiate motion without an applied external force. Sensitivity to this motion cue is present in infants that are a few months old, but whether this sensitivity is experience-dependent or is already…
Descriptors: Motion, Cues, Infants, Neonates
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English, Michael C.; Maybery, Murray T.; Visser, Troy A. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2017
Neurotypical individuals display a leftward attentional bias, called pseudoneglect, for physical space (e.g. landmark task) and mental representations of space (e.g. mental number line bisection). However, leftward bias is reduced in autistic individuals viewing faces, and neurotypical individuals with autistic traits viewing "greyscale"…
Descriptors: Autism, Attention, Spatial Ability, Bias
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Li, Leon; Slevc, L. Robert – Cognitive Science, 2017
Every word signifies multiple senses. Many studies using comprehension-based measures suggest that polysemes' senses (e.g., "paper" as in "printer paper" or "term paper") share lexical representations, whereas homophones' meanings (e.g., "pen" as in "ballpoint pen" or "pig pen")…
Descriptors: Semantics, Phonology, Lexicology, Reading Comprehension
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Bainbridge, Wilma A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
When encountering new people for a brief instant, some seem to last in our memories while others are quickly forgotten. "Memorability"-whether a stimulus is likely to be later remembered-is highly consistent across different group of observers; people tend to remember and forget the same face images. However, is memorability intrinsic to…
Descriptors: Memory, Human Body, Recognition (Psychology), Correlation
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Lovitt, Charles – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2017
This article describes how Charles Lovitt found a classroom activity in a resource book and by peering through a pedagogy lens, enhanced, tweaked, adapted, and extended the idea into a richer, healthier, well balanced classroom lesson. The task described in the article is often presented to students as a flash card for a limited time with the…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Visual Stimuli, Teaching Methods, Computation
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Van Dyke, Katlyn B.; Lieberman, Rachel; Presacco, Alessandro; Anderson, Samira – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2017
Purpose: This study investigates the development of phase locking and frequency representation in infants using the frequency-following response to consonant-vowel syllables. Method: The frequency-following response was recorded in 56 infants and 15 young adults to 2 speech syllables (/ba/ and /ga/), which were presented in randomized order to the…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Phonemes
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