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Peer reviewedAkande, Adebowale – Early Child Development and Care, 2000
Used multiple-baseline design to assess the utility of presenting three types of cues when teaching an abstract concept such as colors to three children with autism: plain, label, and symbol. Found colors presented with cues were easier to learn than color without cues. Findings support the need for sensitivity for the highly individualized…
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Color, Cues
Peer reviewedBooth, Amy E.; Waxman, Sandra R. – Cognition, 2002
Two experiments documented that conceptual knowledge influences 3-year-olds' extension of novel words. When objects were described as having conceptual properties typical of artifacts, children extended novel labels on the basis of shape. When same objects were described as having conceptual properties typical of animate kinds, children extended…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Cues, Generalization
Peer reviewedLiu, Jing; Golinkoff, Roberta Michnick; Sak, Kimberly – Child Development, 2001
Six match-to-sample picture/object selection experiments explored 3- to 5-year-olds' knowledge about superordinate words and acquisition of this knowledge. Findings indicated that number of standards (one versus two), types of standards (different versus same basic-level categories), and nature of representation (pictures versus objects)…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cues
Peer reviewedShi, Rushen; Werker, Janet F.; Morgan, James L. – Cognition, 1999
Presented neonates with lexical and grammatical words prepared from natural maternal speech. Found that neonates could categorically discriminate the sets based on a constellation of perceptual cues that distinguished them. Suggested that this ability to discriminate words on basis of multiple acoustic/phonological cues provides a perceptual base…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cues
Peer reviewedDowns, Elizabeth; Jenkins, Stephen J. – Journal of Experimental Education, 2001
Examined the ability of 64 kindergarten and third-grade children to interpret implied motion in pictures accurately. Third graders were more adept at identifying implied motion. Results also show that postural motion was more effective than a flow-line condition in conveying motion, and that cues and relevant pictorial background information…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Cues, Elementary School Students, Kindergarten Children
Aparicio, Carlos F.; Baum, William M. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
The generality of the molar view of behavior was extended to the study of choice with rats, showing the usefulness of studying order at various levels of extendedness. Rats' presses on two levers produced food according to concurrent variable-interval variable-interval schedules. Seven different reinforcer ratios were arranged within each session,…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Reinforcement, Cues, Intervals
MacKenzie, Douglas J.; Schiavetti, Nicholas; Whitehead, Robert L.; Metz, Dale Evan – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2006
This study investigated the perception of voice onset time (VOT) in speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC). Four normally hearing, experienced sign language users were recorded under SC and speech alone (SA) conditions speaking stimulus words with voiced and voiceless initial consonants embedded in a sentence. Twelve…
Descriptors: Cues, Sign Language, Sentences, Total Communication
Holt, Brett J.; Ratliffe, Thomas – Teaching Elementary Physical Education, 2004
When physical education teachers provide skill cues, they do so with the intention of focusing children's attention on a particular aspect of the motor skill to be performed. Rarely do physical education teachers notice if their cue was provided to the student in figurative or literal language. This article explains the types of figurative…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Figurative Language, Cues, Physical Education
Cardoso-Martins, Claudia; Rodrigues, Larissa A.; Linnea C. Ehri, Linnea C. – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2003
This study investigated the knowledge and strategies that nonliterate adults use to identify print. Participants were 20 low-socioeconomic status Brazilian adults ranging in age from 20 to 74 years. Participants' ability to identify common environmental signs displaying varying degrees of contextual information was investigated along with their…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Illiteracy, Low Income Groups, Beginning Reading
Ghazanfar, Asif A.; Nielsen, Kristina; Logothetis, Nikos K. – Cognition, 2006
Primates, including humans, communicate using facial expressions, vocalizations and often a combination of the two modalities. For humans, such bimodal integration is best exemplified by speech-reading--humans readily use facial cues to enhance speech comprehension, particularly in noisy environments. Studies of the eye movement patterns of human…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Primatology, Cues, Comprehension
Faust, Miriam; Barak, Ofra; Chiarello, Christine – Brain and Language, 2006
The present study examined left (LH) and right (RH) hemisphere involvement in discourse processing by testing the ability of each hemisphere to use world knowledge in the form of script contexts for word recognition. Participants made lexical decisions to laterally presented target words preceded by centrally presented script primes (four…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Word Recognition, Language Processing, Cues
Fitzgerald, Jill; Ramsbotham, Ann – Reading Research and Instruction, 2004
The main purposes of the study were to investigate: (a) the development of two at-risk students' selected cognitions and strategies as they initially appeared in Reading Recovery reading and writing; and (b) whether such development was simultaneously evident in Reading Recovery reading and writing. The study employed case methodology. Main…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Cognitive Development, Reading, Writing (Composition)
Thomson, Jennifer M.; Fryer, Ben; Maltby, James; Goswami, Usha – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
Children with developmental dyslexia appear to be insensitive to basic auditory cues to speech rhythm and stress. For example, they experience difficulties in processing duration and amplitude envelope onset cues. Here we explored the sensitivity of adults with developmental dyslexia to the same cues. In addition, relations with expressive and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Cues, Dyslexia, Auditory Perception
Wakschlag, Lauren S.; Leventhal, Bennett L.; Pine, Daniel S.; Pickett, Kate E.; Carter, Alice S. – Child Development, 2006
There is a robust association between prenatal smoking and disruptive behavior disorders, but little is known about the emergence of such behaviors in early development. The association of prenatal smoking and hypothesized behavioral precursors to disruptive behavior in toddlers (N=93) was tested. Exposed toddlers demonstrated atypical behavioral…
Descriptors: Cues, Developmental Psychology, Psychopathology, Prenatal Influences
Peer reviewedLaval, Virginie; Bert-Erboul, Alain – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
The aim of this study was to examine a form of sarcasm that has hardly been considered to date, sarcastic requests, at an earlier period of development than addressed in past developmental research. This article looked specifically at the role of intonation and context in sarcastic-request understanding by native French-speaking children ages 3 to…
Descriptors: Negative Attitudes, Cues, Intonation, Phonology

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