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Peer reviewedBercsi, Colleen Lynch – Art Education, 1987
Maintains that before any real teaching can take place, art teachers must combat "visual fatigue,""media bombardment," and "sensory overload." Describes each of these phenomena and offers practical advice for overcoming their effects. (JDH)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Commercial Art, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedLorch, Elizabeth Pugzles; Horn, Donna G. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1986
Tests the hypothesis that habituation of attention to irrelevant information can account for within-task improvement in selective attention--that children who are preexposed to stimuli that will later be irrelevant in a speeded classification task will experience less interference than children not given the opportunity to habituate. (HOD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention Control, Classification, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedBertenthal, Bennett I.; And Others – Child Development, 1985
Examines, in three experiments, infant sensitivity at 20, 30, and 36 weeks of age to 3-dimensional structure of a human form specified through biomechanical motions. Findings are interpreted as suggesting that infants, by 36 weeks of age, are extracting fundamental properties necessary for interpreting a point-light display as a person. (Author/BE)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Biomechanics, Cognitive Processes, Dimensional Preference
Peer reviewedCameron, Catherine Ann – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1984
Examines interference in five-year-olds' learning sets by using intertrial and interproblem intervals. It was concluded that intertrial and interproblem intervals differentially affect learning set performance. (Author/CI)
Descriptors: Cues, Learning Processes, Performance Factors, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedFagan, Joseph F. – Intelligence, 1984
Individual differences in visual recognition memory and intelligence were correlated using 52 five-year-olds whose IQs ranged from 40-136. The correlation between memory performance and IQ was .70 for whole sample, and .61 when children with IQs below 75 were omitted. Immediate recognition memory is highly associated with intelligence. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Early Childhood Education, Intelligence Differences
Peer reviewedHowe, Mark L.; And Others – Child Development, 1985
A stages-of-learning model was used to examine effects of picture-word manipulation on storage and retrieval differences between disabled and nondisabled grade 2 and 6 children. Results showed that disabled students are poorer at memory tasks and in developing the ability to reliably retrieve information than nondisabled children. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedGernsbacher, Morton Ann – Cognitive Psychology, 1985
Six experiments investigated loss of availability of surface form in sentence comprehension. Explanations for the loss included: (1) linguistic hypothesis; (2) memory limitations hypothesis; (3) integration hypothesis; and (4) processing shift hypothesis. (LMO)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Comprehension
Peer reviewedMcCloskey, Michael; And Others – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1983
Many people erroneously believe that an object carried by another moving object will, if dropped, fall in a straight vertical line. This belief may stem from a perceptual illusion in which objects dropped from a moving carrier are perceived as falling straight down or even backward. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Mechanics (Physics)
Peer reviewedHoran, Patricia F.; Rosser, Rosemary A. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1983
This study directly compared the effects of a picture selection response with a rotational one. Eighty preschool children were compared on the response modes. Half the children indicated perspective inferences by selecting from a set of photographs while the others rotated a replica. Children were tested on three nonegocentric perspectives.…
Descriptors: Congruence (Psychology), Developmental Stages, Egocentrism, Perception
Peer reviewedMiranda, Simon B. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1976
Visual preference technique was found to be a method for exploring the genesis of normal and abnormal selective attention, pattern discrimination, and recognition memory. The study of infants with differing degrees of risk for mental subnormality produced substantial evidence for relationship between early visual selectivities and future…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Development, Downs Syndrome, Drafting
Argyle, Michael; Graham, Jean Ann – Environmental Psychology and Nonverbal Behavior, 1976
Gaze at objects, another person, and background was measured for 15 days which constituted five different experimental groups in which task and situational factors were varied. Background stimuli had an unreliable effect on gaze. A simple object attracted a great deal of gaze and reduced gaze at the other person. (Author)
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Experimental Psychology, Interaction Process Analysis, Nonverbal Communication
Peer reviewedSchaller, M. Joseph; Dziadosz, Gregory M. – Developmental Psychology, 1976
Preschool and third grade children matched the orientation of stimuli tachistoscopically presented at times individually set to achieve about 75 percent correct performance. Preschoolers showed no superiority on left versus right while third graders showed significant top and right superiorities. Results are compared with those for adults on the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Early Childhood Education, Grade 3, Perceptual Development
Wallace, Jane Bruner – 2000
Two third grade classes in a private school in North Carolina were given keyboarding instruction using Sunburst's "Type To Learn." So that the effects of color-coding could be examined, one class was given standard keyboards to use (control group), while the other was given keyboards that were color-coded according to proper finger placement…
Descriptors: Color, Comparative Analysis, Computer Software, Grade 3
Boswell, Susan; Gray, Debbie – 1998
This paper discusses toilet training children with autism using techniques recommended by TEACCH consultants. It recommends looking at the problem from the perspective of the student with autism in order to build in many elements of visual structure that will help the child understand exactly what is expected. Teachers are urged to look at each…
Descriptors: Autism, Daily Living Skills, Learning Strategies, Student Motivation
Checkosky, Stephen F.; Whitlock, Dean – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1973
The general purpose of the present experiment was to investigate sources of the effect of pattern goodness on human performance. (Author)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, College Students, Diagrams, Experimental Psychology


