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van Roon, Dominique; Caeyenberghs, Karen; Swinnen, Stephan P.; Smits-Engelsman, Bouwien C. M. – Child Development, 2008
To examine the development of feedforward control during manual tracking, 117 participants in 5 age groups (6 to 7, 8 to 9, 10 to 11, 12 to 14, and 15 to 17 years) tracked an accelerating dot presented on a monitor by moving an electronic pen on a digitizer. To remain successful at higher target velocities, they had to create a predictive model of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Adolescents, Visual Stimuli
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Akyurek, Elkan G.; Toffanin, Paolo; Hommel, Bernhard – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Identifying 2 target stimuli in a rapid stream of visual symbols is much easier if the 2nd target appears immediately after the 1st target (i.e., at Lag 1) than if distractor stimuli intervene. As this phenomenon comes with a strong tendency to confuse the order of the targets, it seems to be due to the integration of both targets into the same…
Descriptors: Expectation, Eye Movements, Undergraduate Students, Experimental Psychology
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Liepelt, Roman; Cramon, D. Yves Von; Brass, Marcel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Converging evidence has shown that action observation and execution are tightly linked. The observation of an action directly activates an equivalent internal motor representation in the observer (direct matching). However, whether direct matching is primarily driven by basic perceptual features of the observed movement or is influenced by more…
Descriptors: Observation, Intention, Experimental Psychology, Visual Perception
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Pfordresher, Peter Q. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Past research has suggested that the disruptive effect of altered auditory feedback depends on how structurally similar the sequence of feedback events is to the planned sequence of actions. Three experiments pursued one basis for similarity in musical keyboard performance: matches between sequential transitions in spatial targets for movements…
Descriptors: Music, Auditory Perception, Feedback (Response), Auditory Stimuli
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DeQuinzio, Jaime Ann; Townsend, Dawn Buffington; Poulson, Claire L. – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2008
Children with autism have deficits in social interaction, including the failure to engage in sharing responses. Four children with autism were taught a sharing response chain. The treatment package (manual guidance, auditory prompts, and contingent access to toy play and social interaction with the recipient instructor) was introduced successively…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Autism, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction
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Frischen, Alexandra; Eastwood, John D.; Smilek, Daniel – Psychological Bulletin, 2008
The goal of this review is to critically examine contradictory findings in the study of visual search for emotionally expressive faces. Several key issues are addressed: Can emotional faces be processed preattentively and guide attention? What properties of these faces influence search efficiency? Is search moderated by the emotional state of the…
Descriptors: Search Strategies, Undergraduate Students, Attention, Visual Stimuli
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O'Malley, Shannon; Besner, Derek – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Virtually all theories of visual word recognition assume (typically implicitly) that when a pathway is used, processing within that pathway always unfolds in the same way. This view is challenged by the observation that simple variations in list composition are associated with qualitative changes in performance. The present experiments demonstrate…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Word Recognition, Word Frequency, Oral Reading
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Wilkie, Richard M.; Wann, John P.; Allison, Robert S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
The authors examined observers steering through a series of obstacles to determine the role of active gaze in shaping locomotor trajectories. Participants sat on a bicycle trainer integrated with a large field-of-view simulator and steered through a series of slalom gates. Steering behavior was determined by examining the passing distance through…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Psychomotor Skills, Eye Movements
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Roelofs, Ardi – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Controversy exists about whether dual-task interference from word planning reflects structural bottleneck or attentional control factors. Here, participants named pictures whose names could or could not be phonologically prepared, and they manually responded to arrows presented away from (Experiment 1), or superimposed onto, the pictures…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Auditory Perception, Oral Language, Experiments
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Akkerman, Sanne; Petter, Christian; de Laat, Maarten – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2008
Purpose: The notion of communities of practice (CoP) has received great attention in educational and organisational practice and research. Although the concept originally refers to collaborative practices that emerge naturally, educational and HRD practitioners are increasingly searching for ways to create these practices intentionally in order to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Force Development, Professional Development, Case Studies
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Bolte, Annette; Goschke, Thomas – Cognition, 2008
Intuition denotes the ability to judge stimulus properties on the basis of information that is activated in memory, but not consciously retrieved. In three experiments we show that participants discriminated better than chance fragmented line drawings depicting meaningful objects (coherent fragments) from fragments consisting of randomly displaced…
Descriptors: Semantics, Infants, Intuition, Semiotics
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Ge, Liezhong; Anzures, Gizelle; Wang, Zhe; Kelly, David J.; Pascalis, Olivier; Quinn, Paul C.; Slater, Alan M.; Yang, Zhiliang; Lee, Kang – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2008
Children's recognition of familiar own-age peers was investigated. Chinese children (4-, 8-, and 14-year-olds) were asked to identify their classmates from photographs showing the entire face, the internal facial features only, the external facial features only, or the eyes, nose, or mouth only. Participants from all age groups were familiar with…
Descriptors: Children, Recognition (Psychology), Familiarity, Retention (Psychology)
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Wood, Justin N.; Hauser, Marc D.; Glynn, David D.; Barner, David – Cognition, 2008
Fundamental questions in cognitive science concern the origins and nature of the units that compose visual experience. Here, we investigate the capacity to individuate and store information about non-solid portions, asking in particular whether free-ranging rhesus monkeys ("Macaca mulatta") quantify portions of a non-solid substance presented in…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Psychology, Language Processing, Language Acquisition
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Mitchell, Chris; Nash, Scott; Hall, Geoffrey – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
A robust finding in humans and animals is that intermixed exposure to 2 similar stimuli (AX/BX) results in better discriminability of those stimuli on test than does exposure to 2 equally similar stimuli in 2 separate blocks (CX_DX)--the intermixed-blocked effect. This intermixed-blocked effect may be an example of the superiority of spaced over…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Associative Learning, Learning Theories, Males
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Blechert, Jens; Michael, Tanja; Williams, S. Lloyd; Purkis, Helena M.; Wilhelm, Frank H. – Learning and Motivation, 2008
Contemporary theories of Pavlovian conditioning propose a distinction between signal learning (SL), in which a conditioned stimulus (CS) becomes a predictor for a biologically significant unconditioned stimulus (US), and evaluative learning (EL), in which the valence of the US is transferred to the CS. This distinction is based largely on the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Classical Conditioning, Psychophysiology, Fear
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