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Thoman, Evelyn B.; Ingersoll, Evan W. – Developmental Psychology, 1993
Examined instrumental learning in premature infants by providing 45 infants at 33 weeks conceptual age with either a teddy bear that "breathed" quietly at the infant's respiration rate (BB) or a nonbreathing bear (NBB). Over a two-week period, infants provided with the BB decreased their latency to contact the bear; infants exposed to the NBB…
Descriptors: Child Development, Learning, Learning Processes, Premature Infants
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Loftus, Geoffrey R.; Irwin, David E. – Cognitive Psychology, 1998
Seven experiments studying the relations among different measures of visible and informational persistence after a physical stimulus involving 52 undergraduate and graduate students rely on state-trace analysis to develop a theory of these two types of persistence in the context of visual-information processing. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Persistence
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Mak, Benise S. K.; Vera, Alonso H. – Cognition, 1999
Explored the role of motion versus shape in children's categorization of animal and non-animal kinds. Found that 4-year olds significantly used motion cues over shape cues to categorize objects. Seven-year olds and adults tended to use motion more than shape to categorize animals but not geometric figures. Findings support view that children are…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Classification
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Estes, David – Child Development, 1998
Four-year olds, 6-year olds, and adults were given a computer-game mental rotation task, but with no instructions on mental rotation or other mental activity. Reaction time patterns and verbal reports revealed that 6-year olds were comparable to adults in spontaneous use and subjective awareness of mental rotation. Four-year olds who referred to…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Metacognition
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Welder, Andrea N.; Graham, Susan A. – Child Development, 2001
Examined influence of object labels and shape similarity on 16- to 21-month-olds' inferences. Found that infants generalized non-obvious property of unlabeled objects to test objects with highly similar shapes. For objects labeled with novel nouns, infants relied on shape similarity and shared labels to generalize properties. For objects labeled…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Generalization, Induction, Infants
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Xu, Fei; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2000
Two experiments examined 6-month-olds' ability to discriminate between visual displays of various number of dots varying in size and position, and with controls for other extraneous variables. Findings indicated that infants could discriminate between large sets on the basis of numerosity if they differed by a large ratio (8 versus 16, but not 8…
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Habituation, Infant Behavior, Infants
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Kensinger, Elizabeth A.; Garoff-Eaton, Rachel J.; Schacter, Daniel L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Individuals often claim that they vividly remember information with negative emotional content. At least two types of information could lead to this sense of enhanced vividness: Information about the emotional item itself (e.g., the exact visual details of a snake) and information about the context in which the emotional item was encountered…
Descriptors: Memory, Emotional Experience, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Fisher, Anna V.; Sloutsky, Vladimir M. – Child Development, 2005
The ability to perform induction appears early; however, underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Some argue that early induction is category based, whereas others suggest that early induction is similarity based. Category- and similarity-based induction should result in different memory traces and thus in different memory accuracy. Performing…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Memory, Children, Age Differences
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Hollich, George; Newman, Rochelle S.; Jusczyk, Peter W. – Child Development, 2005
In 4 studies, 7.5-month-olds used synchronized visua-lauditory correlations to separate a target speech stream when a distractor passage was presented at equal loudness. Infants succeeded in a segmentation task (using the head-turn preference procedure with video familiarization) when a video of the talker's face was synchronized with the target…
Descriptors: Infants, Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Stimuli, Visual Stimuli
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Peyrin, Carole; Mermillod, Martial; Chokron, Sylvie; Marendaz, Christian – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Studies on functional hemispheric asymmetries have suggested that the right vs. left hemisphere should be predominantly involved in low vs. high spatial frequency (SF) analysis, respectively. By manipulating exposure duration of filtered natural scene images, we examined whether the temporal characteristics of SF analysis (i.e., the temporal…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes
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Lacroix, Joyca P. W.; Murre, Jaap M. J.; Postma, Eric O.; van den Herik, H. Jaap – Cognitive Science, 2006
The natural input memory (NAM) model is a new model for recognition memory that operates on natural visual input. A biologically informed perceptual preprocessing method takes local samples (eye fixations) from a natural image and translates these into a feature-vector representation. During recognition, the model compares incoming preprocessed…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Models, Visual Perception, Eye Movements
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Smeets, Paul M.; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot – Psychological Record, 2005
Previous research has suggested that persons with mental retardation evidence equivalence more readily after being trained on auditory-visual than on visual-visual match-to-sample tasks. The present study sought to determine if this discrepancy is also apparent in normally capable preschoolers and whether the derived class-consistent test…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Visual Stimuli, Child Psychology, Auditory Stimuli
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Quinn, Paul C. – Psychological Record, 2005
Vidic and Haaf (2004) questioned the idea that infants use head information to categorize cats as distinct from dogs (Quinn & Eimas, 1996) and argued instead that the torso region is important. However, only null results were observed in the critical test comparisons between modified and unmodified stimuli. In addition, a priori preferences for…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Infants, Classification, Infant Behavior
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Jacobs, Alissa; Pinto, Jeannine; Shiffrar, Maggie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
Why are human observers particularly sensitive to human movement? Seven experiments examined the roles of visual experience and motor processes in human movement perception by comparing visual sensitivities to point-light displays of familiar, unusual, and impossible gaits across gait-speed and identity discrimination tasks. In both tasks, visual…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Motion, Visual Stimuli, Visual Discrimination
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Stolz, Jennifer A.; Stevanovski, Biljana – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
Two lexical-decision experiments investigated the effects of semantic priming and stimulus intensity when target location varied and was cued by an abrupt onset. In Experiment 1, the spatial cue was a good predictor of target location, and in Experiment 2 it was not. The results indicate that word recognition processes were postponed until spatial…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Semantics, Validity, Word Recognition
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