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Hatzidaki, Anna; Gianneli, Maria; Petrakis, Eftichis; Makaronas, Nikolaos; Aslanides, Ioannis M. – Dyslexia, 2011
We examined the impact of the effects of dyslexia on various processing and cognitive components (e.g., reading speed and accuracy) in a language with high phonological and orthographic consistency. Greek dyslexic children were compared with a chronological age-matched group on tasks that tested participants' phonological and orthographic…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Dyslexia, Phonological Awareness, Human Body
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Farran, Emily K.; Branson, Amanda; King, Ben J. – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2011
Facial expression recognition was investigated in 20 males with high functioning autism (HFA) or Asperger syndrome (AS), compared to typically developing individuals matched for chronological age (TD CA group) and verbal and non-verbal ability (TD V/NV group). This was the first study to employ a visual search, "face in the crowd" paradigm with a…
Descriptors: Age, Nonverbal Communication, Autism, Asperger Syndrome
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Ferm, Ulrika; Sahlin, Anna; Sundin, Linda; Hartelius, Lena – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2010
Background: Many individuals with Huntington's disease experience reduced functioning in cognition, language and communication. Talking Mats is a visually based low technological augmentative communication framework that supports communication in people with different cognitive and communicative disabilities. Aims: To evaluate Talking Mats as a…
Descriptors: Diseases, Neurological Impairments, Communication Problems, Interpersonal Communication
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Hessler, Dorte; Jonkers, Roel; Bastiaanse, Roelien – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2010
Individuals with aphasia have more problems detecting small differences between speech sounds than larger ones. This paper reports how phonemic processing is impaired and how this is influenced by speechreading. A non-word discrimination task was carried out with "audiovisual", "auditory only" and "visual only" stimulus display. Subjects had to…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Phonetics, Aphasia, Task Analysis
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Guest, Duncan; Kent, Christopher; Adelman, James S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Nosofsky (1983) reported that additional stimulus presentations within a trial increase discriminability in absolute identification, suggesting that each presentation creates an independent stimulus representation, but it remains unclear whether exposure duration or the formation of independent representations improves discrimination in such…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Identification, Sampling, Experimental Psychology
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Mack, Michael L.; Palmeri, Thomas J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
We investigated whether there exists a behavioral dependency between object detection and categorization. Previous work (Grill-Spector & Kanwisher, 2005) suggests that object detection and basic-level categorization may be the very same perceptual mechanism: As objects are parsed from the background they are categorized at the basic level. In…
Descriptors: Classification, English (Second Language), Experimental Psychology, Investigations
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Davies, Daniel K.; Stock, Steven E.; Holloway, Shane; Wehmeyer, Michael L. – Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2010
We examined the utility of a PDA-based software system with integrated GPS technology for providing location-aware visual and auditory prompts to enable people with intellectual disability to successfully navigate a downtown bus route. Participants using the system were significantly more successful at completing a bus route than were people in a…
Descriptors: Transportation, Travel Training, Auditory Stimuli, Comparative Analysis
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Hashim, Azirah – World Englishes, 2010
This paper examines print advertisements in Malaysia to determine how advertisers seek to achieve their primary goal of persuading or influencing an audience by the use of both language and visuals. It describes the main component moves and rhetorical strategies used by writers to articulate the communicative purpose of the genre and the language…
Descriptors: Advertising, Rhetoric, Nationalism, Foreign Countries
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Sato, Yutaka; Sogabe, Yuko; Mazuka, Reiko – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
Infants' speech perception abilities change through the first year of life, from broad sensitivity to a wide range of speech contrasts to becoming more finely attuned to their native language. What remains unclear, however, is how this perceptual change relates to brain responses to native language contrasts in terms of the functional…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Infants, Auditory Perception, Foreign Countries
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Quian Quiroga, Rodrigo; Kreiman, Gabriel – Psychological Review, 2010
The current authors reply to a response by Bowers on a comment by the current authors on the original article. A typical problem in any discussion about grandmother cells is that there is not a general consensus about what should be called as such. Here, we discuss possible interpretations in turn and contrast them with what we find in our own…
Descriptors: Models, Brain, Psychological Studies, Cognitive Psychology
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Cacchione, Trix; Call, Josep – Developmental Science, 2010
We investigated whether great apes, like human infants, monkeys and dogs, are subject to a strong gravity bias when tested with the tubes task, and--in case of mastery--what the source of competence on the tubes task is. We presented 22 apes with three versions of the tubes task, in which an object is dropped down a tube connected to one of three…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Inferences, Animals
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Rundblad, Gabriella; Annaz, Dagmara – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2010
One of the most noticeable problems in autism involves the social use of language such as metaphor and metonymy, both of which are very common in daily language use. The present study is the first to investigate the development of metaphor and metonymy comprehension in autism. Eleven children with autism were compared to 17 typically developing…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Age Differences, Autism, Figurative Language
Davison, Michael; Baum, William M. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2010
Four pigeons were trained in a procedure in which concurrent-schedule food ratios changed unpredictably across seven unsignaled components after 10 food deliveries. Additional green-key stimulus presentations also occurred on the two alternatives, sometimes in the same ratio as the component food ratio, and sometimes in the inverse ratio. In eight…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Animals, Responses
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Rich, Anina N.; Mattingley, Jason B. – Cognition, 2010
Mechanisms of selective attention exert a powerful influence on visual perception. We examined whether attentional selection is necessary for generation of the vivid colours experienced by individuals with grapheme-colour synaesthesia. Twelve synaesthetes and matched controls viewed rapid serial displays of nonsense characters within which were…
Descriptors: Attention, Vision, Visual Perception, Color
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Maloney, Erin A.; Risko, Evan F.; Ansari, Daniel; Fugelsang, Jonathan – Cognition, 2010
Individuals with mathematics anxiety have been found to differ from their non-anxious peers on measures of higher-level mathematical processes, but not simple arithmetic. The current paper examines differences between mathematics anxious and non-mathematics anxious individuals in more basic numerical processing using a visual enumeration task.…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Mathematics Anxiety, Measures (Individuals), Mathematics Tests
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