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Kemner, Chantal; van Ewijk, Lizet; van Engeland, Herman; Hooge, Ignace – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2008
Subjects with PDD excel on certain visuo-spatial tasks, amongst which visual search tasks, and this has been attributed to enhanced perceptual discrimination. However, an alternative explanation is that subjects with PDD show a different, more effective search strategy. The present study aimed to test both hypotheses, by measuring eye movements…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Eye Movements, Hypothesis Testing, Human Body
Stanley, Gordon; Jackson, Robert – J Psychol, 1969
Descriptors: Light, Motion, Visual Discrimination
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Bigelow, Ann E.; Power, Michelle; Mcquaid, Nancy; Ward, Ashley; Rochat, Philippe – Infancy, 2008
Observers watched videotaped face-to-face mother-infant and stranger-infant interactions of 12 infants at 2, 4, or 6 months of age. Half of the observers saw each mother paired with her own infant and another infant of the same age (mother tapes) and half saw each infant paired with his or her mother and with a stranger (infant tapes). Observers…
Descriptors: Adults, Mothers, Infants, Interaction
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Hubner, Ronald; Lehle, Carola – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
In this study, the authors used a dual-task flanker paradigm to investigate the degree to which flankers are coprocessed with the target as a function of whether flankers have to be used as stimuli for a second task. A series of experiments, in which performance in dual tasks was compared with that in single tasks, revealed that participants had a…
Descriptors: Attention, Experiments, Visual Stimuli, Task Analysis
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Behrmann, Marlene; Peterson, Mary A.; Moscovitch, Morris; Suzuki, Satoru – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Whether objects are represented as a collection of parts whose relations are coded independently remains a topic of ongoing discussion among theorists in the domain of shape perception. S. M., an individual with integrative agnosia, and neurologically intact ("normal") individuals learned initially to identify 4 target objects constructed of 2…
Descriptors: Perception, Neurological Impairments, Visual Discrimination
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Kahana-Kalman, Ronit; Goldman, Sylvie – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2008
This study examined the ability of young children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) to detect affective correspondences between facial and vocal expressions of emotion using an intermodal matching paradigm. Four-year-old children with ASD (n = 18) and their age-matched normally developing peers (n = 18) were presented pairs of videotaped facial…
Descriptors: Mothers, Autism, Young Children, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Ludlow, A. K.; Wilkins, A. J.; Heaton, P. – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2008
Children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), together with controls matched for age and ability participated in three experiments that assessed the therapeutic benefit of colored overlays. The findings from the first experiment showed that a significantly greater proportion of children with ASD, than controls, increased reading speed when using…
Descriptors: Autism, Reading Rate, Therapy, Color
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Oksama, Lauri; Hyona, Jukka – Cognitive Psychology, 2008
Tracking of multiple moving objects is commonly assumed to be carried out by a fixed-capacity parallel mechanism. The present study proposes a serial model (MOMIT) to explain performance accuracy in the maintenance of multiple moving objects with distinct identities. A serial refresh mechanism is postulated, which makes recourse to continuous…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory, Task Analysis
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Tormanen, Minna R. K.; Takala, Marjatta; Sajaniemi, Nina – Support for Learning, 2008
This study examined whether audiovisual computer training without linguistic material had a remedial effect on different learning disabilities, like dyslexia and ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder). This study applied a pre-test-intervention-post-test design with students (N = 62) between the ages of 7 and 19. The computer training lasted eight weeks…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Dyslexia, Attention Deficit Disorders, Students
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Mulligan, Neil W.; Osborn, Katherine – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
The modality-match effect in recognition refers to superior memory for words presented in the same modality at study and test. Prior research on this effect is ambiguous and inconsistent. The present study demonstrates that the modality-match effect is found when modality is rendered salient at either encoding or retrieval. Specifically, in…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Recall (Psychology), Evaluation, Experiments
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Maurer, Daphne; Lewis, Terri L. – Child Development, 1979
Descriptors: Infants, Visual Discrimination, Visual Perception
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Andrzejewski, Matthew E.; Terry-Cain, Shelly; Bersh, Philip J. – Psychological Record, 2004
In a first series of experiments, 9 groups of rats were exposed to 30 20-minute sessions of successive visual discrimination training ("go/no-go," or mult FR-1 ext), where components ([S.sup.D] and [S.sup.[DELTA]]) were equal (1 min) in length. Responses during [S.sup.D] were reinforced with a nonresetting delay (Experiment 1a) or a resetting…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Control Groups, Visual Discrimination
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Layton, Derek; Rochat, Philippe – Infancy, 2007
The contribution of motion and feature invariant information in infants' discrimination of maternal versus female stranger faces was assessed. Using an infant controlled habituation--dishabituation procedure, 4- and 8-month-old infants (N = 62) were tested for their ability to discriminate between their mother and a female stranger in 4 different…
Descriptors: Mothers, Infants, Motion, Visual Stimuli
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Gerhardstein, Peter; Tse, J.; Kraebel, K. – Journal of Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention, 2007
Reminder cues can impact remembering in infancy in multiple ways. Infants typically show highly specific remembering following a reminder, or reactivation procedure, but in some instances, (such as size perception) have demonstrated an ability to remember when given a cue or prime that differs in certain specific characteristics, relative to the…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Memory, Visual Perception
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Laeng, Bruno; Overvoll, Morten; Ole Steinsvik, Oddmar – Brain and Cognition, 2007
We hypothesized that the right hemisphere would be superior to the left hemisphere in remembering having seen a specific picture before, given its superiority in perceptually encoding specific aspects of visual form. A large set of pictures (N=1500) of animals, human faces, artifacts, landscapes, and art paintings were shown for 2 s in central…
Descriptors: Patients, Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Retention (Psychology)
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