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Xu, Xinhao; Ke, Fengfeng – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2014
As information and communication technology continues to evolve, body sensory technologies, like the Microsoft Kinect, provide learning designers new approaches to facilitating learning in an innovative way. With the advent of body sensory technology like the Kinect, it is important to use motor activities for learning in good and effective ways.…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Sensory Experience, Perceptual Motor Learning, Educational Technology
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Andreasson, Jesper – Ethnography and Education, 2014
The aim of this article is to describe and analyse learning processes among bodybuilders in bodybuilding environments, focusing on the ways activities form the basis for incorporation of both physical and cultural knowledge. Emanating from an ethnographic study, the arguments are based on a constructionist approach to knowledge. The result…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Human Body, Physiology, Ethnography
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Uehara, Luiz; Button, Chris; Falcous, Mark; Davids, Keith – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2016
Background: Under the view of dynamical system theory, expertise in sports emerges from the interaction of multiple constraints. At an individual level, important interactions amongst constraints could include the relationships that evolve between one's family, playmates/coaches, and specific training activities. Or more broadly, other…
Descriptors: Athletics, Expertise, Physical Education, Skill Development
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Riviere, James; David, Elodie – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
In the C-not-B task, 2.5-year-old children tend to look for an object in a location to which the hiding agent moved his hand (C) after moving an object from A to B. In three experiments, the authors investigated the nature of the constraints underlying toddlers' performance in this task. In Experiment 1, 2.5-year-olds were tested in a new version…
Descriptors: Young Children, Object Permanence, Toddlers, Experiments
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D'Angelo, Maria C.; Jimenez, Luis; Milliken, Bruce; Lupianez, Juan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Individuals experience less interference from conflicting information following events that contain conflicting information. Recently, Jimenez, Lupianez, and Vaquero (2009) demonstrated that such adaptations to conflict occur even when the source of conflict arises from implicit knowledge of sequences. There is accumulating evidence that momentary…
Descriptors: Conflict, Learning Processes, Sequential Learning, Motor Reactions
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Hsu, Wen-Chun; Shih, Ju-Ling – International Journal of Distance Education Technologies, 2016
In this study, to learn the routine of Tantui, a branch of martial arts was taken as an object of research. Fitts' stages of motor learning and augmented reality (AR) were applied to a 3D mobile-assisted learning system for martial arts, which was characterized by free viewing angles. With the new system, learners could rotate the viewing angle of…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Simulated Environment, Electronic Learning, Physical Activities
Koehlinger, Keegan M. – EBP Briefs (Evidence-based Practice Briefs), 2015
Clinical Question: Would a preschool-aged child with childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) benefit from a singular approach--such as motor planning, sensory cueing, linguistic and rhythmic--or a combined approach in order to increase intelligibility of spoken language? Method: Systematic Review. Study Sources: ASHA Wire, Google Scholar, Speech Bite.…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Speech Improvement, Evidence Based Practice, Literature Reviews
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Fabbri, Marco; Cellini, Nicola; Martoni, Monica; Tonetti, Lorenzo; Natale, Vincenzo – Cognitive Science, 2013
The spatial-temporal association indicates that time is represented spatially along a left-to-right line. It is unclear whether the spatial-temporal association is mainly related to a perceptual or a motor component. In addition, the spatial-temporal association is not consistently found using a time reproduction task. Our rationale for this…
Descriptors: Cognitive Science, Spatial Ability, Perception, Correlation
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Rosalie, Simon M.; Muller, Sean – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2012
This paper presents a preliminary model that outlines the mechanisms underlying the transfer of perceptual-motor skill learning in sport and everyday tasks. Perceptual-motor behavior is motivated by performance demands and evolves over time to increase the probability of success through adaptation. Performance demands at the time of an event…
Descriptors: Perceptual Motor Learning, Transfer of Training, Behavior, Athletics
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Henley, Matthew – Journal of Dance Education, 2014
There are many reasons to teach dance as part of the broader curriculum. This article focuses on using dance as a way to foster critical thinking. In this conceptual article, I draw from the National Standards goals that were in line with my own framework of dance as uniquely engaging the three different sensory systems of exteroception,…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Teaching Methods, Sensory Experience, Perceptual Development
Segawa, Jennifer Anne – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Speech utterances are phoneme sequences but may not always be represented as such in the brain. For instance, electropalatography evidence indicates that as speaking rate increases, gestures within syllables are manipulated separately but those within consonant clusters act as one motor unit. Moreover, speech error data suggest that a syllable's…
Descriptors: Brain, Speech, Neurological Organization, Phonemes
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Abrahamson, Dor; Sánchez-García, Raúl – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2015
Whereas Natural User Interface technological devices, such as tablets, are bringing physical interaction back into mathematics learning activities, existing educational theory is not geared to inform or interpret such learning. In particular, educational researchers investigating instructional interactions still need intellectual and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Teacher Student Relationship, Teacher Behavior
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Vicovaro, Michele – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2014
In this study, the intuitive physics of free fall was explored using Information Integration Theory and Functional Measurement. The participants had to rate the speed of objects differing in mass and height of release at the end of an imagined free fall. According to physics, falling speed increases with height of release but it is substantially…
Descriptors: Physics, Intuition, Scientific Concepts, Beliefs
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Hu, Fang-Tzu; Ginns, Paul; Bobis, Janette – Australian Journal of Educational & Developmental Psychology, 2014
Cognitive load theory seeks to generate novel instructional designs through a focus on human cognitive architecture including a limited working memory; however, the potential for enhancing learning through non-visual or non-auditory working memory channels is yet to be evaluated. This exploratory experiment tested whether explicit instructions to…
Descriptors: Geometry, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Short Term Memory
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Bufford, Carolyn A.; Mettler, Everett; Geller, Emma H.; Kellman, Philip J. – Grantee Submission, 2014
Mathematics requires thinking but also pattern recognition. Recent research indicates that perceptual learning (PL) interventions facilitate discovery of structure and recognition of patterns in mathematical domains, as assessed by tests of mathematical competence. Here we sought direct evidence that a brief perceptual learning module (PLM)…
Descriptors: Algebra, Expertise, Perceptual Motor Learning, Intervention
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