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Wentworth, Naomi; Haith, Marshall M. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Compared interstimulus interval (ISI) eye movements of 3-month-olds viewing an alternating picture sequence with those of infants viewing an irregular sequence. Found that all infants exhibited shifts during ISIs. Repetitive saccades declined while alternating and anticipatory saccades increased in alternating sequences. ISI shift frequency did…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Expectation, Infants
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Tsamir, Pessia; Tirosh, Dina – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1999
Demonstrates how research-based knowledge of students' incompatible solutions to various representations of the same problem could be used to raise their awareness of inconsistencies in their reasoning. Reports that students' decisions as to whether two given infinite sets have the same number of elements depend on the specific representation of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Metacognition, Secondary Education, Spatial Ability
Wheatley, Grayson H. – Focus on Learning Problems in Mathematics, 1998
Describes three activities of imaging, including constructing an image, representation-presenting the image, and transforming the image. Discusses a link between imaging and number sense, teaching students to image, and assessing imaging. Contains 25 references. (ASK)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Mathematics Instruction, Number Concepts, Spatial Ability
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Golbeck, Susan L.; Sinagra, Karen – Journal of Experimental Education, 2000
Studied the effects of peer collaboration on the acquisition of the understanding that water remains invariantly horizontal. Results from 69 female and 22 male college students show that peer collaboration did not lead to greater understanding than working alone, but that men and women talked about the problem differently and that the use of…
Descriptors: College Students, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Sex Differences
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Mohler, James L. – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 2001
Discusses issues related to delivering spatially oriented data to the general public, since communication through computer graphics should be accessible to the masses as well as to specialists. The second half of the paper describes the Purdue University Virtual Visit, a resource being used for visualization and communication at Purdue University…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Information Dissemination, Spatial Ability, Virtual Reality
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Lennon, P. Alan – American Biology Teacher, 2000
Presents a study reviewing the importance of spatial ability to biology achievement and demonstrates a spatial enhancement that presents content while improving an important aspect of spatial ability, flexibility of closure. (Contains 31 references.) (ASK)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Biology, Elementary Secondary Education, Science Education
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Spencer, John P.; Smith, Linda B.; Thelen, Esther – Child Development, 2001
Five experiments tested hypothesis that the A-not-B error results from general processes that make goal-directed actions to remembered locations. Findings showed that 2-year-olds' performance on the A trial was accurate. When the object was hidden at Location B, searches after 10-second delay were biased in the direction of Location A. This bias…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Error Patterns, Memory, Prior Learning
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Hermer-Vazquez, Linda; Spelke, Elizabeth S.; Katsnelson, Alla S. – Cognitive Psychology, 1999
Used a dual-task method to study the processes that underlie the flexible conjunction of information. Results of four experiments, involving 16, 36, 12, and 16 college students and adults suggest that flexible spatial memory depends on the ability to combine diverse information sources rapidly into unitary representations. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education
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Sorby, Sheryl A. – Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering, 2001
Explains the importance of spatial visualization skills in engineering and women's lack of 3-D spatial skills. Introduces a special course designed to enhance 3-D spatial skills as they relate to the retention and overall success of female engineering students. (Contains 25 references.) (Author/YDS)
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Females, Higher Education, School Holding Power
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Riejos, Ana M. Roldan; Mansilla, Paloma, Ubeda; Castillejos, Ana M. Martin – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2001
Values the use of a contextualized poster in which the images are more important than the actual words. Confirms this through an analysis of a questionnaire handed out to a sample of 'English for Specific Purposes' students. Addresses the pedagogical implications that the use of a poster has proved to have with a multidisciplinary group of…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Higher Education, Metaphors, Spatial Ability
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Vandenberg, Donald – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2002
The basic task of educational theory is to ground education in the being of children and youth. Education, however, is a very broad domain, consisting of four major problem areas: (1) the nature and aim of education; (2) the organisation of instruction and school policy; (3) the design and content of the curriculum; and (4) the teaching and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Phenomenology, Learning, Educational Theories
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Richardson, John T. E. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
The cube imitation test was developed by Knox (1913) as a nonverbal test of intelligence. Many variants show satisfactory reliability, but performance is correlated both with Verbal IQ and with Performance IQ. Performance is impaired by cerebral lesions but unrelated to the side of lesion. Examinees describe both verbal and visuospatial…
Descriptors: Verbal Tests, Performance Tests, Nonverbal Tests, Intelligence Tests
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Lange, Elke B. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2005
In four experiments the behavioral consequences of an involuntary attentional distraction concerning memory performance was investigated. The working memory model of Cowan (1995) predicts a performance deficit for memory representations that are held in an active state when the focus of attention is distracted by a change in physical properties.…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Memorization, Recall (Psychology), Models
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Amorim, Michel-Ange; Isableu, Brice; Jarraya, Mohamed – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2006
The cognitive advantage of imagined spatial transformations of the human body over that of more unfamiliar objects (e.g., Shepard-Metzler [S-M] cubes) is an issue for validating motor theories of visual perception. In 6 experiments, the authors show that providing S-M cubes with body characteristics (e.g., by adding a head to S-M cubes to evoke a…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes, Human Body
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Bhatt, Ramesh S.; Hayden, Angela; Reed, Andrea; Bertin, Evelin; Joseph, Jane – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
Object parts are signaled by concave discontinuities in shape contours. In seven experiments, we examined whether 5- and 6 1/2-month-olds are sensitive to concavities as special aspects of contours. Infants of both ages detected discrepant concave elements amid convex distractors but failed to discriminate convex elements among concave…
Descriptors: Infants, Perception, Child Psychology, Visual Discrimination
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