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Wang, Dong-Yuan Debbie; Procter, Robert W.; Pick, David F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
Four experiments investigated influences of irrelevant action effects on response selection in Simon tasks for which tone pitch was relevant and location irrelevant, and responses were clockwise-counterclockwise wheel rotations. When the wheel controlled left-right movement of a cursor in a direction opposite an instructed left-right hand-movement…
Descriptors: Experiments, Motion, Coding, Responses
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Valenza, Eloisa; Bulf, Hermann – Developmental Science, 2007
Previous research, in which static figures were used, showed that the ability to perceive illusory contours emerges around 7 months of age. However, recently, evidence has suggested that 2-3-month-old infants are able to perceive illusory contours when motion information is available (Johnson & Mason, 2002; Otsuka & Yamaguchi, 2003). The present…
Descriptors: Neonates, Motion, Kinetics, Kinesthetic Perception
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Kholmetskii, A. L.; Yarman, T. – European Journal of Physics, 2007
In this paper, we analyse a number of paradoxical teaching problems of classical electrodynamics, dealing with the relativistic transformation of force for complex macro systems, consisting of a number of subsystems with nonzero relative velocities such as electric circuits that change their shape in the course of time. (Contains 7 figures.)
Descriptors: Energy, Physics, Motion, Equipment
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Krajsek, Simona Strgulc; Vilhar, Barbara – Journal of Biological Education, 2010
We developed and tested a lesson plan for active teaching of diffusion in secondary schools (grades 10-13), which stimulates understanding of the thermal (Brownian) motion of particles as the principle underlying diffusion. During the lesson, students actively explore the Brownian motion through microscope observations of irregularly moving small…
Descriptors: Animation, Computer Graphics, Play, Role Playing
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Rodrigues, Andre Machado; Tavares, Luciani Bueno; Ortega, Jose Luis; De Mattos, Cristiano Rodrigues – Science Education International, 2010
This paper investigates physics teacher class planning and its consequences during implementation in class mainly focusing the contradictions emerged among teacher's and students' expectations of the class. This situation is analysed from a socio-cultural-historical point of view mainly supported by Activity Theory. We highlight the components of…
Descriptors: Physics, Lesson Plans, Planning, Science Instruction
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Hatsidimitris, George; Connor, Rick; Ginges, Jacinda; Wolfe, Joe – Teaching Science, 2010
"Glimpses of Science" is the outcome of collaboration between the University of New South Wales and four primary schools in the Sydney metropolitan region. A prototype kit on the topic of sound was developed and demonstrated by the team. This kit formed the basis for further science activities to be designed and produced in conjunction…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Foreign Countries, Hands on Science, Elementary School Science
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Provost, J.-P.; Bracco, C. – European Journal of Physics, 2009
Proceeding like Newton with a discrete time approach of motion and a geometrical representation of velocity and acceleration, we obtain Kepler's laws without solving differential equations. The difficult part of Newton's work, when it calls for non-trivial properties of ellipses, is avoided by the introduction of polar coordinates. Then a simple…
Descriptors: Motion, Secondary School Teachers, Equations (Mathematics), Mathematics Instruction
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Conlon, Elizabeth G.; Sanders, Mary A.; Wright, Craig M. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
The aim of the first of two experiments was to investigate the effect of practice on sensitivity to global motion and global form in a group of adults with dyslexia, a group of normal readers with visual discomfort, a group with dyslexia and visual discomfort, and a control group. In comparison to the control group, and regardless of the effect of…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Dyslexia, Motion, Short Term Memory
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Robertson, William H. – Science Education Review, 2009
In order to create student interest and promote new connections to the understanding of fundamental physics concepts, there is a need for new approaches and methods that are both contemporary and relevant. Dr Skateboard's Action Science, a curriculum supplement comprising video instruction and classroom activities, is an example that focuses on…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Student Interests, Physics, Motion
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Battelli, Lorella; Alvarez, George A.; Carlson, Thomas; Pascual-Leone, Alvaro – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Interhemispheric competition between homologous areas in the human brain is believed to be involved in a wide variety of human behaviors from motor activity to visual perception and particularly attention. For example, patients with lesions in the posterior parietal cortex are unable to selectively track objects in the contralesional side of…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Inhibition, Visual Perception, Brain
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Maus, Gerrit W.; Nijhawan, Romi – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
When a moving object abruptly disappears, this profoundly influences its localization by the visual system. In Experiment 1, 2 aligned objects moved across the screen, and 1 of them abruptly disappeared. Observers reported seeing the objects misaligned at the time of the offset, with the continuing object leading. Experiment 2 showed that the…
Descriptors: Adults, Visual Perception, Experiments, Experimental Psychology
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Butcher, Phillipa R.; van Braeckel, Koen; Bouma, Anke; Einspieler, Christa; Stremmelaar, Elisabeth F.; Bos, Arend F. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2009
Background: The quality of very preterm infants' spontaneous movements at 11 to 16 weeks post-term age is a powerful predictor of their later neurological status. This study investigated whether early spontaneous movements also have predictive value for the intellectual and behavioural problems that children born very preterm often experience.…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Premature Infants, Motion, Human Body
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White, Peter A. – Psychological Review, 2009
Impressions of force are commonplace in the visual perception of objects interacting. It is proposed that these impressions have their source in haptically mediated experiences of exertion of force in actions on objects. Visual impressions of force in interactions between objects occur by a kind of generalization of the proprioceptive impression…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Visual Perception, Cognitive Psychology, Visual Stimuli
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Bryce, T. G. K.; MacMillan, K. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2009
Researchers and practitioners alike express concerns about the conceptual difficulties associated with the concepts of momentum and kinetic energy currently taught in school physics. This article presents an in-depth analysis of the treatment given to them in 44 published textbooks written for UK secondary school certificate courses. This is set…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Textbooks, Kinetics, Physics
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Bellver-Cebreros, Consuelo; Rodriguez-Danta, Marcelo – European Journal of Physics, 2009
An apparently unnoticed analogy between the torque-free motion of a rotating rigid body about a fixed point and the propagation of light in anisotropic media is stated. First, a new plane construction for visualizing this torque-free motion is proposed. This method uses an intrinsic representation alternative to angular momentum and independent of…
Descriptors: Optics, Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Light
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