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Alam, Junaid; Hassan, Hafsa; Shamim, Sohaib; Mahmood, Waqas; Anwar, Muhammad Sabieh – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Frictional losses are experimentally determined for a uniform circular disc exhibiting rotational motion. The clockwise and anticlockwise rotations of the disc, that result when a hanger tied to a thread is released from a certain height, give rise to vertical oscillations of the hanger as the thread winds and unwinds over a pulley attached to the…
Descriptors: Motion, Science Instruction, Physics, Measurement Techniques
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Mulvey, Genna M.; Kubo, Masayoshi; Chang, Chia-Lin; Ulrich, Beverly D. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2011
Perception of affordances research in children with developmental disabilities has only examined well practiced skills. Ten toddlers with Down syndrome and 10 with typical development walked across a GAITRite mat, with and without an obstacle. We coded the toddlers' behaviors after 1 and 3 months of walking experience when they encountered the…
Descriptors: Risk Management, Developmental Disabilities, Down Syndrome, Toddlers
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Kunar, Melina A.; Watson, Derrick G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
In visual search tasks participants search for a target among distractors in strictly controlled displays. We show that visual search principles observed in these tasks do not necessarily apply in more ecologically valid search conditions, using dynamic and complex displays. A multi-element asynchronous dynamic (MAD) visual search was developed in…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Experimental Psychology, Undergraduate Students
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Varlet, Manuel; Marin, Ludovic; Lagarde, Julien; Bardy, Benoit G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
The goal of the current study was to investigate whether a visual coupling between two people can produce spontaneous interpersonal postural coordination and change their intrapersonal postural coordination involved in the control of stance. We examined the front-to-back head displacements of participants and the angular motion of their hip and…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Visual Perception, Human Posture
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Gates, Joshua – Physics Teacher, 2011
Early in their study of one-dimensional kinematics, my students build an algebraic model that describes the effects of a rolling ball's (perpendicular) collision with a wall. The goal is for the model to predict the ball's velocity when it returns to a fixed point approximately 50-100 cm from the wall as a function of its velocity as it passes…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Motion, Error Patterns, Models
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Purcell, Catherine; Wann, John P.; Wilmut, Kate; Poulter, Damian – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2011
As pedestrians, the perceptual ability to accurately judge the relative rate of approaching vehicles and select a suitable crossing gap requires sensitivity to looming. It also requires that crossing judgments are synchronized with motoric capabilities. Previous research has suggested that children with Developmental Co-ordination Disorder (DCD)…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Perceptual Motor Coordination, Children, Visual Perception
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Laine, France; Rauzy, Stephane; Tardif, Carole; Gepner, Bruno – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2011
Imitation deficits observed among individuals with autism could be partly explained by the excessive speed of biological movements to be perceived and then reproduced. Along with this assumption, slowing down the speed of presentation of these movements might improve their imitative performances. To test this hypothesis, 19 children with autism,…
Descriptors: Autism, Imitation, Down Syndrome, Severe Disabilities
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Bokor, Nandor – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Momentum space and Minkowski diagrams are powerful tools for interpreting and analysing relativistic collisions in one or two spatial dimensions. All relevant quantities that characterize a collision, including the mass, velocity, momentum and energy of the interacting particles, both before and after collision, can be directly seen from a single…
Descriptors: Motion, Science Instruction, Geometric Concepts, Scientific Principles
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Munoz, R.; Gonzalez-Garcia, G.; Izquierdo-De La Cruz, E.; Fernandez-Anaya, G. – European Journal of Physics, 2011
A bead sliding, under the sole influence of its own weight, on a rigid wire shaped in the fashion of a plane curve, will describe (generally anharmonic) oscillations around a local minimum. For given shapes, the bead will behave as a harmonic oscillator in the whole range, such as an unforced, undamped, Duffing oscillator, etc. We also present…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Physics, Motion
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Gingl, Zoltan; Mingesz, Robert; Makra, Peter; Mellar, Janos – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Photogates are probably the most commonly used electronic instruments to aid experiments in the field of mechanics. Although they are offered by many manufacturers, they can be too expensive to be widely used in all classrooms, in multiple experiments or even at home experimentation. Today all computers have a sound card--an interface for analogue…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education
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Aurora, Tarlok S.; Brunner, Bernard J. – Physics Education, 2011
In introductory physics, students learn that an object tossed upward has a constant downward acceleration while going up, at the highest point and while falling down. To demonstrate this concept, a self-propelled fan cart system is used on a frictionless track. A quick push is given to the fan cart and it is allowed to move away on a track under…
Descriptors: Physics, Motion, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
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Bruijn, Sjoerd M.; Meyns, Pieter; Jonkers, Ilse; Kaat, Desloovere; Duysens, Jacques – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2011
Children with hemiparetic Cerebral Palsy (CP) walk with marked asymmetries. For instance, we have recently shown that they have less arm swing on the affected side, and more arm swing at the unaffected side. Such an increase in arm swing at the unaffected side may be aimed at controlling total body angular momentum about the vertical axis,…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Cerebral Palsy, Motion, Psychomotor Skills
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Olofson, Eric L.; Baldwin, Dare – Cognition, 2011
We investigated infants' ability to recognize the similarity between observed and implied goals when actions differed in surface-level motion details. In two experiments, 10- to 12-month-olds were habituated to an actor manipulating an object and then shown test actions in which the actor contacted the object with a novel hand configuration that…
Descriptors: Infants, Motion, Object Manipulation, Experiments
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Lieberherr, Martin – Physics Teacher, 2011
The centripetal acceleration has been known since Huygens' (1659) and Newton's (1684) time. The physics to calculate the acceleration of a simple pendulum has been around for more than 300 years, and a fairly complete treatise has been given by C. Schwarz in this journal. But sentences like "the acceleration is always directed towards the…
Descriptors: Physics, Laboratory Equipment, Science Equipment, Motion
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Bardi, Lara; Regolin, Lucia; Simion, Francesca – Developmental Science, 2011
The present study addresses the hypothesis that detection of biological motion is an intrinsic capacity of the visual system guided by a non-species-specific predisposition for the pattern of vertebrate movement and investigates the role of global vs. local information in biological motion detection. Two-day-old babies exposed to a biological…
Descriptors: Animals, Motion, Comparative Analysis, Scientific Concepts
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