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Showing 1 to 15 of 79 results Save | Export
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Cuadrado-García, Manuel; Montoro-Pons, Juan D.; Miquel-Romero, María-José – International Journal of Music Education, 2023
Music preferences have been shown to be determined by a diversity of factors such as cognitive, emotional, cultural, or experiential. Having studied music is also a factor that has been considered from a musicology standpoint and is linked to the accumulation of cultural capital, as analyzed in cultural economics, arts management, and the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Classification, Preferences, Cultural Capital
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Lany, Jill; Thompson, Abbie; Aguero, Ariel – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Words influence cognition well before infants know their meanings. For example, three-month-olds are more likely to form visually based categories when exemplars are paired with spoken words than with sine-wave tones, a likely precursor to learning symbolic relations between words and their referents. However, it is unclear why words have these…
Descriptors: Infants, Naming, Nonverbal Communication, Classification
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Landon, Trenton J.; Nay, Andrew; Connor, Annemarie; Phillips, Brian N.; Reyes, Antonio R.; Leavitt, Jeremy – Rehabilitation Research, Policy, and Education, 2021
Purpose: The International Classification of Functioning (ICF) provides a framework for understanding and accommodating disability. This study examined predictors and outcomes of ICF familiarity among rehabilitation counselors. Method: Analysis of variance and hierarchical regression analysis were used to examine research questions related to ICF…
Descriptors: Classification, Rehabilitation Counseling, Counselors, Familiarity
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Abel, Roman – Cognitive Science, 2023
Research on sequence effects on learning "visual" categories has shown that interleaving (i.e., studying the categories in a mixed manner) facilitates category induction as compared to blocking (i.e., studying the categories one by one), but learners are unaware of the interleaving effect and prefer blocking. However, little attention…
Descriptors: Sequential Learning, Sensory Experience, Learning Modalities, Auditory Stimuli
Yevgeniy Vasilyevich Melguy – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The aim of this dissertation is to investigate the mechanisms involved in phonetic learning of an unfamiliar accent, focusing on understanding what processes underlie changes to phonetic category structure, how such learning affects subsequent online lexical processing, and whether the same mechanisms that underlie learning for a single speaker…
Descriptors: Dialects, Familiarity, Phonetics, Learning Processes
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Pauen, Sabina; Peykarjou, Stefanie – Developmental Psychology, 2023
This study explores how 7-month-old infants categorize graphical images varying in basic perceptual features by using a fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) task. Most participants were Caucasian and their parents had a higher education, but the family's socioeconomic background was mixed. Experiment 1 (N = 23) tested brain responses to…
Descriptors: Infants, Classification, Comparative Analysis, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Doss, William; Rayfield, John – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2019
Changes in Supervised Agricultural Experiences (SAEs) and a lack of SAE category knowledge have been identified as causes to declining SAE participation (Dyer & Osborne, 1995; Steel, 1997; Wilson & Moore, 2007). Recently, the National Council for Agricultural Education and the National FFA Organization have redefined SAE and created new…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Field Experience Programs, Program Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes
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Ying, Yuanfan; Yang, Xiaolu; Shi, Rushen – First Language, 2022
Previous studies show that infants store functional morphemes for inferring syntactic categories of adjacent words, and they generally perform better with nouns than with verbs. In this study, we tested whether toddlers can exploit phrasal groupings for syntactic categorization in the face of noisy co-occurrence patterns. Using a visual fixation…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Toddlers, Language Acquisition, Inferences
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Ruba, Ashley L.; Meltzoff, Andrew N.; Repacholi, Betty M. – Developmental Psychology, 2020
Accurate perception of emotional (facial) expressions is an essential social skill. It is currently debated whether emotion categorization in infancy emerges in a "broad-to-narrow" pattern and the degree to which language influences this process. We used an habituation paradigm to explore (a) whether 14- and 18-month-old infants perceive…
Descriptors: Infants, Nonverbal Communication, Emotional Response, Toddlers
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Weidemann, Christoph T.; Kahana, Michael J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2019
Dual-process models of recognition memory typically assume that independent familiarity and recollection signals with distinct temporal profiles can each lead to recognition (enabling 2 routes to recognition), whereas single-process models posit a unitary "memory strength" signal. Using multivariate classifiers trained on spectral…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Memory, Familiarity, Recall (Psychology)
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Bülthoff, Isabelle; Zhao, Mintao – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
Many studies have demonstrated that we can identify a familiar face on an image much better than an unfamiliar one, especially when various degradations or changes (e.g., image distortions or blurring, new illuminations) have been applied, but few have asked how different types of facial information from familiar faces are stored in memory. Here…
Descriptors: Memory, Classification, Human Body, Self Concept
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Schwarz, Amy Louise; Jurica, Meagan; Edge, Charlsa Matson; Stiller, Rachel; Webb-Culver, Taylor; Abdi, Hervé – American Annals of the Deaf, 2022
Teachers of the d/Deaf (TODs) struggle to select appropriate storybooks for elementary-aged Deaf pre-readers who use American Sign Language (Hayes & Shaw, 1994). Hayes and Shaw (1994) created a book selection system for TODs, but their methodology was difficult to evaluate. The purpose of the present research was to create an empirically…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Deafness, Hearing Impairments, American Sign Language
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Lee, Hye Yeon; List, Alexandra – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2023
This study examined the role of relevance determinations within the context of undergraduates' multiple text reading and writing. In this study, undergraduate students were randomly assigned to one of two experimental conditions (i.e., to compose a research report about either the causes of or the solutions to the urban housing crisis), using a…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Literacy, Comparative Analysis, Relevance (Education)
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Tamati, Terrin N.; Pisoni, David B.; Moberly, Aaron C. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2021
Purpose: This preliminary research examined (a) the perception of two common sources of indexical variability in speech--regional dialects and foreign accents, and (b) the relation between indexical processing and sentence recognition among prelingually deaf, long-term cochlear implant (CI) users and normal-hearing (NH) peers. Method: Forty-three…
Descriptors: Dialects, Pronunciation, Assistive Technology, Deafness
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Clarke, A. J. Benjamin; Ludington, Jason D. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2018
Normative databases containing psycholinguistic variables are commonly used to aid stimulus selection for investigations into language and other cognitive processes. Norms exist for many languages, but not for Thai. The aim of the present research, therefore, was to obtain Thai normative data for the BOSS, a set of 480 high resolution color…
Descriptors: Thai, Norms, Psycholinguistics, Visual Aids
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