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Peer reviewedFriedman, William J.; And Others – Child Development, 1995
Examined developmental changes in the use of distance-based and calendar-based approaches to estimate the recency of two events. Found that children's ability to discriminate temporal relationships between two events appears by four to five years of age. In contrast, use of calendar information and cognizance of annual patterns was found only in…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Cues
Peer reviewedLiwag, Maria D.; Stein, Nancy L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Assessed preschoolers' recall of past events and emotional reactions to those events and the importance of emotion-related cues in activating event memory. Suggests the children were competent at remembering a past event that precipitated an emotion and displayed this competence by recalling their emotional reactions, goals, plans, and actions, as…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Emotional Experience, Emotional Response
Peer reviewedFichten, C. S.; And Others – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1991
Sighted (n=37), partially sighted (n=20), and blind (n=17) participants answered questions about their expression and interpretation of verbal and nonverbal cues during telephone conversations, face-to-face encounters, and dating. The groups used an equal number of cues. Results have implications for developing specific communication skills of…
Descriptors: Adults, Blindness, Communication Skills, Cues
Peer reviewedSteffens, Michele L.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1992
This study examined the abilities of 18 adults with familial dyslexia to use steady state, dynamic, and temporal cues in synthetic speech continua. Although subjects were able to label and discriminate the continua, they did not necessarily use acoustic cues in the same manner as did normal readers, and their overall performance was less accurate.…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Adults, Artificial Speech, Auditory Discrimination
Peer reviewedBugental, Daphne Blunt; And Others – New Directions for Child Development, 1992
Examined developmental changes and individual variations in the ways children use expressive information from others. Concluded that processing deficits are more probable for younger children or for children with low perceived control than for other children. (BB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Structures
Peer reviewedGlat, Rosana; And Others – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1994
This case study describes initially unsuccessful attempts to use the delayed-cue procedure to teach conditional discriminations to a 25-year-old male with moderate mental retardation. The subject typically waited for the delayed cue unless differential responses to the dictated samples (repeating the sample names) were required. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Case Studies, Cues, Discrimination Learning
Peer reviewedMcDonald, Janet L.; Heilenman, Kathy L. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1991
Investigates the determinants of adult usage of various syntactic and semantic cues in sentence interpretation. Native French speakers and advanced English/French bilinguals were tested for the strength of usage of word order, clitic pronoun agreement, verb agreement, and noun animacy cues in the assignment of the role in French sentences. (46…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Cues, English, French
Peer reviewedCapelli, Carol A.; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Two experiments compared the abilities of third and sixth graders and adults to recognize sarcasm given context and intonation cues. Children recognized sarcasm only when given a speaker's sarcastic intonation cue, even when context strongly indicated a nonliteral interpretation. (BC)
Descriptors: Adults, Cues, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedBrooks, Patricia J.; MacWhinney, Brian – Journal of Child Language, 2000
Two experiments examined phonological priming in children and adults using a cross-modal picture-word interference task. Pictures of familiar objects were presented on a computer screen, while interfering words were presented over headphones. Results indicate that priming effects reach a peak during a time when articulatory information is being…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Computer Assisted Testing, Cues, Error Patterns
Peer reviewedDapretto, Mirella; Bjork, Elizabeth L. – Child Development, 2000
Examined word retrieval in 14- to 24-month-olds. Found that children with limited productive vocabularies were less likely to produce labels of hidden objects than children with larger vocabularies, even though all could name them and did well when asked to find them. Pictorial cues facilitated word retrieval. Naming errors peaked among children…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Cues
Peer reviewedSewell, Teena J.; Collins, Belva C.; Hemmeter, Mary Louise; Schuster, John W. – Journal of Early Intervention, 1998
A multiple probe across skills, single-subject research design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of a simultaneous prompting procedure with a physical guidance controlling prompt to teach three dressing skills to two preschoolers with disabilities. Both students maintained skills with 90% accuracy up to six weeks following acquisition.…
Descriptors: Cues, Disabilities, Learning Strategies, Outcomes of Education
Peer reviewedMontgomery, Derek E.; Bach, Leslie M.; Moran, Christy – Child Development, 1998
Three studies examined children's understanding of looking behavior in revealing another's desired goal. Found that 6-year olds and adults, but not 4-year olds, consistently regarded prolonged looking as a more important cue than glancing or inadvertent touching of the protagonist's goal. Results suggest that development is characterized by…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Child Behavior, Child Development
Peer reviewedWheeler, John J.; Carter, Stacy L. – B.C. Journal of Special Education, 1998
Examines the utility of visual cues as a form of antecedent management for promoting task engagement and lessening the effects of severe and challenging behavior among children with autism. Specific guidelines for designing and implementing activity schedules are described, and a case study is presented. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Autism, Behavior Modification, Behavior Problems, Case Studies
Grossi, Teresa A. – Journal of the Association for Persons with Severe Handicaps, 1998
This study investigated effects of a self-operated auditory prompting system on work performance of two supported employees with severe disabilities in community employment settings. Musical tapes embedded and interspersed with the auditory prompts increased work performance for each employee. Future research for implementing such systems in…
Descriptors: Adults, Assistive Devices (for Disabled), Audiotape Recordings, Cues
Peer reviewedMayringer, Heinz; Wimmer, Heinz – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2000
Two experiments found that German-speaking dyslexic 9-year-olds showed impaired learning of pseudonames in several visual-verbal learning tasks, even when phonological retrieval cues were provided and when pseudonames were presented in spoken and printed form. There was no deficit when short, familiar words were used, and no difficulty in…
Descriptors: Children, Comparative Analysis, Cues, Dyslexia


