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O'Donnell, L. M.; Smith, A. J. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1994
This article describes the physiological mechanisms involved in three-dimensional depth perception and presents a variety of distance and depth cues and strategies for detecting and estimating curbs and steps for individuals with impaired vision. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Cues, Depth Perception, Partial Vision, Physiology
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Soderfeldt, Birgitta; And Others – Sign Language Studies, 1994
Examined cerebral activation during sign language comprehension in six persons with deafness and nine hearing persons, all of whose parents were deaf. The group with deafness showed more activation than the hearing group in the right parieto-occipital region, indicating that they were more dependent on the spatial components in sign language than…
Descriptors: Adults, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Comparative Analysis, Deafness
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Nicholls, Andrea L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Two experiments examined children's ability to use lengths of lines on a page to show orientations of object surfaces. Found that five- and six-year olds are more reluctant to depart from actual object proportions than seven- and eight-year olds, but children in both age groups can foreshorten line lengths to indicate surfaces receding from a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Freehand Drawing, Perceptual Development, Psychomotor Skills
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Bushnell, Emily W.; And Others – Child Development, 1995
Examined the ability of 1-year olds to remember the location of nonvisible targets. Found that infants were able to associate a nonvisible target with a direct landmark and to code its distance and direction with respect to themselves or the larger framework. Difficulty of coding with indirect landmarks was associated with cognitive complexity and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Infants
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Lord, Thomas R.; Rupert, Joy L. – Journal of Elementary Science Education, 1995
Administered two standard measures of spatial aptitude to several hundred elementary education majors. Reports that the men in the group significantly outperformed the women, men and women choosing to specialize in science and math scored significantly higher than their non-science-math peers, and there was no significant difference between men…
Descriptors: Education Majors, Elementary Education, Mathematics, Science Education
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Stiles, Joan; And Others – Child Development, 1991
In two experiments, preschool children and adults were asked to judge which way an equilateral triangle was pointing under several contextual conditions. Results indicated that children and adults attended to both global and local levels of a pattern. (BC)
Descriptors: Context Effect, Geometric Constructions, Preschool Children, Preschool Education
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Sonnenschein, Susan; And Others – Early Education and Development, 1993
Examined effects of task context and difficulty on mother-child instructional interactions and the role of maternal views about task context and difficulty. Mothers taught what they thought the particular context required and varied their teaching according to what they believed to be true of their children. (BG)
Descriptors: Mother Attitudes, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Parents as Teachers
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Nougier, Vincent; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1992
The development of visual orienting to a cued target on the part of practicing and nonpracticing tennis players aged 13, 16, and 25 years was examined. Results indicated that practicers were not faster than nonpracticers in processing visual information and that subjects of all ages oriented attention voluntarily to cued locations. (LB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Athletes, Cues, Performance Factors
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Schumann-Hengsteler, Ruth – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 1992
Two studies investigated the effect of age on memory for visual and spatial information. Five to 10 year olds were asked to reconstruct a previously seen spatial arrangement of objects. The association between an object's identity and its location was weaker for younger than for older children. (LB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Foreign Countries, Memory
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Bigelow, A. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1991
This article reports on a study of the spatial mapping skills of two totally blind, two visually impaired, and eight normally sighted children. Children were asked to point to familiar locations in and around their homes. Results suggest that blindness interferes with the development of spatial knowledge in which Euclidean directions between…
Descriptors: Blindness, Concept Formation, Partial Vision, Schemata (Cognition)
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Tellevik, J. M. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1992
Ten sighted adults were blindfolded and asked to find four objects in the open space of a room. A perimeter pattern, a gridlike search pattern, and a reference-point strategy were variably effective, indicating that different kinds of experience may result in different kinds of knowledge that are optimal for different spatial judgment tasks.…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Blindness, Cognitive Mapping
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Pickens, Jeffrey – Developmental Psychology, 1994
Sixty-four infants viewed side-by-side videotapes of toy trains (in four visual conditions) and listened to sounds at increasing or decreasing amplitude designed to match one of the videos. Results suggested that five-month olds were sensitive to auditory-visual distance relations and that change in size was an important visual depth cue. (MDM)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Cues, Depth Perception, Distance
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Fabricius, William V.; Wellman, Henry M. – Child Development, 1993
Investigated 4-6 year olds' ability to compare the distances covered by a direct and an indirect route to a location. Although many children believed that both routes covered the same distance, about 40% of the four year olds could explain why the direct route was shorter. (MDM)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Distance, Early Childhood Education, Perceptual Development
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Zwaan, Rolf A.; van Oostendorp, Herre – Discourse Processes, 1993
Investigates whether spatial situation models are constructed in naturalistic story comprehension. Claims that, during normal reading, readers are not very much engaged in constructing, maintaining, and updating a spatial situation model. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Inferences, Narration
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Slater, Alan; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1991
Tested infants' remembrance of the orientations and angular relations of line segments. In one experiment, infants "dishabituated" to a change in orientation but not a change in angle. In two further experiments, infants familiar with either an acute or obtuse angle gave strong novelty preferences to a different angle. (BC)
Descriptors: Dimensional Preference, Foreign Countries, Neonates, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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