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Cowan, Nelson; Morey, Candice C.; AuBuchon, Angela M.; Zwilling, Christopher E.; Gilchrist, Amanda L. – Developmental Science, 2010
Previous studies have indicated that visual working memory performance increases with age in childhood, but it is not clear why. One main hypothesis has been that younger children are less efficient in their attention; specifically, they are less able to exclude irrelevant items from working memory to make room for relevant items. We examined this…
Descriptors: Young Children, Short Term Memory, Memorization, Adults
Back, Elisa; Apperly, Ian A. – Cognition, 2010
A recent study by Apperly et al. (2006) found evidence that adults do not automatically infer false beliefs while watching videos that afford such inferences. This method was extended to examine true beliefs, which are sometimes thought to be ascribed by "default" (e.g., Leslie & Thaiss, 1992). Sequences of pictures were presented in which the…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Personality, Inferences, Cognitive Development
Barca, Laura; Cappelli, Francesca R.; Di Giulio, Paola; Staccioli, Susanna; Castelli, Enrico – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2010
This study examined the feasibility of the Atkinson Battery for Child Development for Examining Functional Vision (Atkinson, Anker, Rae, et al., 2002) to evaluate neurovisual functions of children with neurodevelopmental disorders in outpatient setting. A total of 90 patients underwent a comprehensive evaluation. Among these, a group of 33…
Descriptors: Rehabilitation Programs, Cerebral Palsy, Vision, Patients
Gottlieb, Lauren J.; Uncapher, Melina R.; Rugg, Michael D. – Neuropsychologia, 2010
The present study contrasted the neural correlates of encoding item-context associations according to whether the contextual information was visual or auditory. Subjects (N = 20) underwent fMRI scanning while studying a series of visually presented pictures, each of which co-occurred with either a visually or an auditorily presented name. The task…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Tests, Memory, Language Processing, Neurological Organization
Chae, Soo Jung – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This study was to investigate whether there are differences in perception of the symbols representing six emotions between the Korean and the American teachers. For an accurate comparison, two transparency tasks (Task 1-1 and Task 2) and one translucency task (Task 3) were used to investigate differences between Korean and American special…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Translation, Emotional Response, Cultural Differences
Geng, Gretchen – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2011
This paper investigated teachers' verbal and non-verbal strategies for managing ADHD students in a classroom environment. It was found that effective verbal and non-verbal strategies included voice control, short phrases, repeated instructions, using students' names, and visual cues and verbal instructions combined. It has been found that…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Classroom Techniques, Cues, Classroom Environment
Kujawa, Autumn J.; Torpey, Dana; Kim, Jiyon; Hajcak, Greg; Rose, Suzanne; Gotlib, Ian H.; Klein, Daniel N. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2011
Attentional biases for negative stimuli have been observed in school-age and adolescent children of depressed mothers and may reflect a vulnerability to depression. The direction of these biases and whether they can be identified in early childhood remains unclear. The current study examined attentional biases in 5-7-year-old children of depressed…
Descriptors: Mothers, Young Children, Depression (Psychology), Parent Influence
Couperus, Jane W. – Developmental Psychology, 2011
Research suggests that visual selective attention develops across childhood. However, there is relatively little understanding of the neurological changes that accompany this development, particularly in the context of adult theories of selective attention, such as N. Lavie's (1995) perceptual load theory of attention. This study examined visual…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Attention, Visual Perception, Children
Magiera, Marta T.; Zawojewski, Judith S. – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2011
This exploratory study focused on characterizing problem-solving situations associated with spontaneous metacognitive activity. The results came from connected case studies of a group of 3 purposefully selected 9th-grade students working collaboratively on a series of 5 modeling problems. Students' descriptions of their own thinking during…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Metacognition, Grade 9, Problem Solving
Lim, Kien H. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2011
This article presents a lesson that uses prediction items, clickers and visuals via PowerPoint slides to help prospective middle-school teachers address two common misconceptions: multiplication makes bigger and division makes smaller (MMB-DMS). Classroom research was conducted to explore the viability of such a lesson. Results show that the…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Prediction, Effect Size, Educational Opportunities
Deligianni, Fani; Senju, Atsushi; Gergely, Gyorgy; Csibra, Gergely – Developmental Psychology, 2011
The current study tested whether the purely amodal cue of contingency elicits orientation following behavior in 8-month-old infants. We presented 8-month-old infants with automated objects without human features that did or did not react contingently to the infants' fixations recorded by an eye tracker. We found that an object's occasional…
Descriptors: Infants, Social Cognition, Eye Movements, Interaction
Sanefuji, Wakako; Ohgami, Hidehiro – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2011
The typical development (TD) of social cognition could be rooted in the implicit notion that others are like the self. Although many studies show their impairment of social orienting, such a primary notion in children with autistic disorder (AD) has not been known. The present paper examined the responses of children with AD to stimuli such as…
Descriptors: Autism, Familiarity, Social Cognition, Self Concept
Hickey, Clayton; Di Lollo, Vincent; McDonald, John J. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Attentional selection of a target presented among distractors can be indexed with an event-related potential (ERP) component known as the N2pc. Theoretical interpretation of the N2pc has suggested that it reflects a fundamental mechanism of attention that shelters the cortical representation of targets by suppressing neural activity stemming from…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Diagnostic Tests, Attention, Brain Hemisphere Functions
ten Holt, G. A.; van Doorn, A. J.; de Ridder, H.; Reinders, M. J. T.; Hendriks, E. A. – Sign Language Studies, 2009
We present the results of an experiment on lexical recognition of human sign language signs in which the available perceptual information about handshape and hand orientation was manipulated. Stimuli were videos of signs from Sign Language of the Netherlands (SLN). The videos were processed to create four conditions: (1) one in which neither…
Descriptors: Sign Language, Visual Perception, Foreign Countries, Visual Stimuli
McMillan, D. E.; Wessinger, William D.; Li, Mi – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2009
Drugs with multiple actions can have complex discriminative-stimulus properties. An approach to studying such drugs is to train subjects to discriminate among drug combinations and individual drugs in the combination so that all of the complex discriminative stimuli are present during training. In the current experiments, a four-choice procedure…
Descriptors: Narcotics, Animals, Stimuli, Visual Stimuli

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