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Wilson, Kathleen M.; Swanson, H. Lee – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2001
The relationship between verbal and visual-spatial working memory and mathematical computation skill was examined in 98 children and adults with and without mathematical disabilities. A hierarchical regression analysis, when partialing for reading ability, age, and gender influences, showed mathematical computation was better predicted by verbal…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Computation
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Plumert, Jodie M.; Hawkins, Aimee M. – Child Development, 2001
Examined in 4 experiments 3- and 4-year-olds' ability to communicate about containment and proximity relations. Found that when describing where a toy mouse was hidden, children were more likely to successfully disambiguate a small landmark when it was in, rather than next to, the large landmark. Three-year-olds initiated searches faster when the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Bias, Cognitive Development, Communication Skills
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Lynn, Richard; Song, Myung Ja – Personality and Individual Differences, 1994
Nine-year olds completed measures of general intelligence, visuospatial ability, and verbal fluency. Subjects were 107 Korean children and 115 British children. Found that Korean children scored higher on general intelligence and visuospatial ability and lower on verbal fluency than British children. (BC)
Descriptors: Children, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries
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Mumford, Michael D.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1994
How learning styles (massed versus distributed practice) influence the relationship between abilities and task performance was studied with 209 undergraduates. Analysis reveals that perceptual speed contributes to performance for subjects who massed practice, whereas spatial visualization contributed for those who distributed practice.…
Descriptors: Ability, Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Performance
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Rochat, Philippe; Hespos, Susan J. – Cognitive Development, 1996
Examines the ability of infants to track and anticipate the final orientation of an object. Subjects were infants ranging from an average of four months to eight months old. Three experiments, with the last one as control, were carried out. Concludes that infants show some rudimentary mental rotation from four months of age. (MOK)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Infants
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Plumert, Jodie M.; Nichols-Whitehead, Penney – Developmental Psychology, 1996
Two studies documented and evaluated parental scaffolding of three- and four-year olds' spatial communication in direction-giving tasks. Found that both age groups benefited from directive prompts, but 3-year olds benefited less than 4-year olds from nondirective prompts. (MDM)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cues, Parent Child Relationship, Preschool Children
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de Ribaupierre, Anik; Bailleux, Christine – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2000
Summarizes similarities and differences between the working memory models of Pascual-Leone and Baddeley. Debates whether each model makes a specific contribution to explanation of Kemps, De Rammelaere, and Desmet's results. Argues for necessity of theoretical task analyses. Compares a study similar to that of Kemps et al. in which different…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
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Papafragou, Anna; Massey, Christine; Gleitman, Lila – Cognition, 2002
Two studies investigated whether language-specific patterns encoding manner and direction of motion in English and Greek affect adult and child speakers' performance on nonlinguistic motion tasks and linguistic descriptions of these motion events. Although the two linguistic groups differed in linguistic preferences, nonlinguistic task performance…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Contrastive Linguistics
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Grobecker, Betsey; De Lisi, Richard – Learning Disability Quarterly, 2000
This study compared the spatial-geometrical abilities of 85 students (ages 5-13) with learning disabilities (LD) and 94 children without LD, matched for IQ and age. Generally, students with LD did not perform as well as same-aged students without LD, suggesting that LD students experience delayed development in this general spatial-cognitive…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Ability, Concept Formation, Elementary Education
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Van Rooy, C.; Stough, C.; Pipingas, A.; Hocking, C.; Silberstein, R. B. – Intelligence, 2001
Used steady-state probe topography to investigate the cortical activity of 12 average and 12 high IQ Australian college students during a spatial working memory task. Results, in terms of changes in visual evoked potentials, suggest that the areas of the brain involved in working memory are influenced by individual differences in intelligence.…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Brain, College Students, Correlation
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Blumberg, Fran C.; Torenberg, Meira – Infant and Child Development, 2005
This study investigated the effects of spatial arrangement on preschool children's selective attention and incidental learning. Three- and four-year old children were shown a multi-coloured box designated as a "special place" containing miniature chairs and models of animals. One category of objects were designated as relevant and one as…
Descriptors: Attention, Incidental Learning, Preschool Children, Spatial Ability
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Sovrano, Valeria Anna; Bisazza, Angelo; Vallortigara, Giorgio – Cognition, 2005
Disoriented children could use geometric information in combination with landmark information to reorient themselves in large but not in small experimental spaces. We tested fish in the same task and found that they were able to conjoin geometric and non-geometric (landmark) information to reorient themselves in both the large and the small space…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Animals, Spatial Ability, Personal Space
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Andresen, David R.; Marsolek, Chad J. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Past research indicates that specific shape recognition and spatial-relations encoding rely on subsystems that exhibit right-hemisphere advantages, whereas abstract shape recognition and spatial-relations encoding rely on subsystems that exhibit left-hemisphere advantages. Given these apparent regularities, we tested whether asymmetries in shape…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Task Analysis
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Pavani, Francesco; Farne, Alessandro; Ladavas, Elisabetta – Brain and Cognition, 2005
We asked 22 right brain-damaged (RBD) patients and 11 elderly healthy controls to perform hand-pointing movements to free-field unseen sounds, while modulating two non-auditory variables: the initial position of the responding hand (left, centre or right) and the presence or absence of task-irrelevant ambient vision. RBD patients suffering from…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Spatial Ability, Perceptual Impairments, Auditory Perception
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Millar, Susanna; Al-Attar, Zainab – Brain and Cognition, 2005
We investigate how vision affects haptic performance when task-relevant visual cues are reduced or excluded. The task was to remember the spatial location of six landmarks that were explored by touch in a tactile map. Here, we use specially designed spectacles that simulate residual peripheral vision, tunnel vision, diffuse light perception, and…
Descriptors: Cues, Vision, Tactual Perception, Spatial Ability
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