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Desmurget, Michel; Turner, Robert S.; Prablanc, Claude; Russo, Gary S.; Alexander, Garret E.; Grafton, Scott T. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Six results are reported. (a) Reaching accuracy increases when visual capture of the target is allowed (e.g., target on vs. target off at saccade onset). (b) Whatever the visual condition, trajectories diverge only after peak acceleration, suggesting that accuracy is improved through feedback mechanisms. (c) Feedback corrections are smoothly…
Descriptors: Feedback, Error Correction, Visual Perception, Human Body
Church, Ellen Booth – Early Childhood Today, 2006
Group time discussions help children make their own choices about the activities and centers they would like to visit throughout the day. It is easy when visual reminders are used. Children can make choices about learning centers, receive center tags or "play passes," and be inspired to try new activities. The only thing needed is a system. This…
Descriptors: Young Children, Decision Making, Visual Stimuli, Cues
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Bar-Haim, Yair; Lamy, Dominique; Glickman, Shlomit – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Accumulating evidence suggests the existence of a processing bias in favor of threat-related stimulation in anxious individuals. Using behavioral and ERP measures, the present study investigated the deployment of attention to face stimuli with different emotion expressions in high-anxious and low-anxious participants. An attention-shifting…
Descriptors: Cues, Reaction Time, Anxiety, Models
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Miguel, C. F.; Petursdottir, A. I.; Carr, J. E. – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2005
The purpose of this study was to determine whether multiple-tact training and receptive-discrimination training could be used to teach thematically related vocal intraverbals to typically developing preschool children. Multiple-tact training involved teaching a child to name both the item and the category to which the item belonged.…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Visual Stimuli, Verbal Communication, Classification
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Macizo, Pedro; Bajo, M. Teresa – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2004
Four experiments are reported to study lexical access in picture naming. Interference was found when semantically related word primes were presented, but no effect was obtained using picture primes (Experiment 1). In Experiments 2a, 2b and 3, we introduced a new technique: Double-priming. The technique requires naming a picture target after…
Descriptors: Semantics, Cognitive Processes, Semiotics, Word Recognition
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Duffy, Sean; Huttenlocher, Janellen; Crawford, L. Elizabeth – Developmental Science, 2006
The present study tests a model of category effects upon stimulus estimation in children. Prior work with adults suggests that people inductively generalize distributional information about a category of stimuli and use this information to adjust their estimates of individual stimuli in a way that maximizes average accuracy in estimation (see…
Descriptors: Classification, Computation, Visual Stimuli, Generalization
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Masataka, Nobuo – Developmental Science, 2006
Behavioral preferences for consonance over dissonance were tested in hearing infants of deaf parents and in hearing infants of hearing parents when they were 2 days old. Using a modified visual-fixation-based, auditory-preference procedure, I found that both 2-day-old infants of deaf parents and those of hearing parents looked longer at a visual…
Descriptors: Intervals, Deafness, Neonates, Auditory Perception
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Adler, Scott A.; Orprecio, Jazmine – Developmental Science, 2006
Visual search studies with adults have shown that stimuli that contain a unique perceptual feature pop out from dissimilar distractors and are unaffected by the number of distractors. Studies with very young infants have suggested that they too might exhibit pop-out. However, infant studies have used paradigms in which pop-out is measured in…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Attention Control, Attention, Infants
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Gutierrez, Ranier; De la Cruz, Vanesa; Rodriguez-Ortiz, Carlos J.; Bermudez-Rattoni, Federico – Learning & Memory, 2004
The relevance of perirhinal cortical cholinergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission for taste recognition memory and learned taste aversion was assessed by microinfusions of muscarinic (scopolamine), NMDA (AP-5), and AMPA (NBQX) receptor antagonists. Infusions of scopolamine, but not AP5 or NBQX, prevented the consolidation of taste recognition…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Recognition (Psychology), Animals, Primatology
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Crow, Terry – Learning & Memory, 2004
The less-complex central nervous system of many invertebrates make them attractive for not only the molecular analysis of the associative learning and memory, but also in determining how neural circuits are modified by learning to generate changes in behavior. The nudibranch mollusk "Hermissenda crassicornis" is a preparation that has contributed…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Identification, Classical Conditioning, Anatomy
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Schott, Bjorn H.; Sellner, Daniela B.; Lauer, Corinna-J.; Habib, Reza; Frey, Julietta U.; Guderian, Sebastian; Heinze, Hans-Jochen; Duzel, Emrah – Learning & Memory, 2004
Recent evidence suggests a close functional relationship between memory formation in the hippocampus and dopaminergic neuromodulation originating in the ventral tegmental area and medial substantia nigra of the midbrain. Here we report midbrain activation in two functional MRI studies of visual memory in healthy young adults. In the first study,…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Memory, Neurological Organization, Brain
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Kudoh, Masaharu; Shibuki, Katsuei – Learning & Memory, 2006
We have previously reported that sound sequence discrimination learning requires cholinergic inputs to the auditory cortex (AC) in rats. In that study, reward was used for motivating discrimination behavior in rats. Therefore, dopaminergic inputs mediating reward signals may have an important role in the learning. We tested the possibility in the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Discrimination Learning, Rewards
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Pelletier, Joe Guillaume; Likhtik, Ekaterina; Filali, Mohammed; Pare, Denis – Learning & Memory, 2005
Manipulations that reduce or enhance the activity of basolateral amygdala (BLA) neurons in the minutes to hours after training have been shown to respectively impair or facilitate retention on the inhibitory avoidance task. Although this suggests that BLA activity is altered after emotional arousal, such changes have not been directly…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Emotional Response, Self Efficacy, Arousal Patterns
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Michels, Birgit; Diegelmann, Soren; Tanimoto, Hiromu; Schwenkert, Isabell; Buchner, Erich; Gerber, Bertram – Learning & Memory, 2005
Synapsins are evolutionarily conserved, highly abundant vesicular phosphoproteins in presynaptic terminals. They are thought to regulate the recruitment of synaptic vesicles from the reserve pool to the readily-releasable pool, in particular when vesicle release is to be maintained at high spiking rates. As regulation of transmitter release is a…
Descriptors: Animals, Associative Learning, Role, Neurology
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Livingston, Kenneth R.; Andrews, Janet K. – Developmental Science, 2005
After learning to categorize a set of alien-like stimuli in the context of a story, a group of 5-year-old children and adults judged pairs of stimuli from different categories to be less similar than did groups not learning the category distinction. In a same-different task, the learning group made more errors on pairs of non-identical stimuli…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Young Children, Adults, Concept Formation
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