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Showing 1,126 to 1,140 of 4,976 results
Barenholtz, Elan; Feldman, Jacob – Cognition, 2006
Figure/ground assignment--determining which part of the visual image is foreground and which background--is a critical step in early visual analysis, upon which much later processing depends. Previous research on the assignment of figure and ground to opposing sides of a contour has almost exclusively involved static geometric factors--such as…
Descriptors: Visual Discrimination, Geometric Concepts, Cues, Animation
Ghazanfar, Asif A.; Nielsen, Kristina; Logothetis, Nikos K. – Cognition, 2006
Primates, including humans, communicate using facial expressions, vocalizations and often a combination of the two modalities. For humans, such bimodal integration is best exemplified by speech-reading--humans readily use facial cues to enhance speech comprehension, particularly in noisy environments. Studies of the eye movement patterns of human…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Primatology, Cues, Comprehension
Rips, Lance J.; Asmuth, Jennifer; Bloomfield, Amber – Cognition, 2006
According to one theory about how children learn the concept of natural numbers, they first determine that "one", "two", and "three" denote the size of sets containing the relevant number of items. They then make the following inductive inference (the Bootstrap): The next number word in the counting series denotes the size of the sets you get by…
Descriptors: Numbers, Number Concepts, Inferences, Computation
Sher, Shlomi; McKenzie, Craig R. M. – Cognition, 2006
Framing effects are said to occur when equivalent frames lead to different choices. However, the equivalence in question has been incompletely conceptualized. In a new normative analysis of framing effects, we complete the conceptualization by introducing the notion of information equivalence. Information equivalence obtains when no…
Descriptors: Inferences, Concept Formation, Cognitive Processes, Decision Making
Peperkamp, Sharon; Le Calvez, Rozenn; Nadal, Jean-Pierre; Dupoux, Emmanuel – Cognition, 2006
Phonological rules relate surface phonetic word forms to abstract underlying forms that are stored in the lexicon. Infants must thus acquire these rules in order to infer the abstract representation of words. We implement a statistical learning algorithm for the acquisition of one type of rule, namely allophony, which introduces context-sensitive…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Phonetics, Experiments, Sampling
Okamoto-Barth, Sanae; Kawai, Nobuyuki – Cognition, 2006
The present study investigated how anticipation of a target's appearance affects human attention to gaze cues provided by a schematic face. Subjects in a "catch" group received a high number of "catch" trials, in which no target stimulus appeared. Subjects in the control group did not receive any catch trials. As in previous studies, both groups…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Attention, Stimuli, Control Groups
Bigand, E.; Poulin-Charronnat, B. – Cognition, 2006
The present paper reviews a set of studies designed to investigate different aspects of the capacity for processing Western music. This includes perceiving the relationships between a theme and its variations, perceiving musical tensions and relaxations, generating musical expectancies, integrating local structures in large-scale structures,…
Descriptors: Music, Music Appreciation, Cognitive Processes, Schemata (Cognition)
Trehub, Sandra E.; Hannon, Erin E. – Cognition, 2006
We review the literature on infants' perception of pitch and temporal patterns, relating it to comparable research with human adult and non-human listeners. Although there are parallels in relative pitch processing across age and species, there are notable differences. Infants accomplish such tasks with ease, but non-human listeners require…
Descriptors: Music, Infants, Auditory Perception, Schemata (Cognition)
Fitch, W. Tecumseh – Cognition, 2006
Studies of the biology of music (as of language) are highly interdisciplinary and demand the integration of diverse strands of evidence. In this paper, I present a comparative perspective on the biology and evolution of music, stressing the value of comparisons both with human language, and with those animal communication systems traditionally…
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Music, Comparative Analysis
Jackendoff, Ray; Lerdahl, Fred – Cognition, 2006
We explore the capacity for music in terms of five questions: (1) What cognitive structures are invoked by music? (2) What are the principles that create these structures? (3) How do listeners acquire these principles? (4) What pre-existing resources make such acquisition possible? (5) Which aspects of these resources are specific to music, and…
Descriptors: Interaction, Cognitive Structures, Music, Affective Behavior
Peretz, Isabelle – Cognition, 2006
Music, as language, is a universal human trait. Throughout human history and across all cultures, people have produced and enjoyed music. Despite its ubiquity, the musical capacity is rarely studied as a biological function. Music is typically viewed as a cultural invention. In this paper, the evidence bearing on the biological perspective of the…
Descriptors: Music, Brain, Genetics, Cognitive Processes
Bharucha, J. Jamshed; Curtis, Meagan; Paroo, Kaivon – Cognition, 2006
In this paper, we argue that music cognition involves the use of acoustic and auditory codes to evoke a variety of conscious experiences. The variety of domains that are encompassed by music is so diverse that it is unclear whether a single domain of structure or experience is defining. Music is best understood as a form of communication in which…
Descriptors: Music, Schemata (Cognition), Acoustics, Recognition (Psychology)
Marcus, Gary F. – Cognition, 2006
Against a background of recent progress in developmental neuroscience, some of which has been taken as challenging to the modularity hypothesis of Fodor (1983), this article contrasts two competing conceptions of modularity: sui generis modularity, according to which modules are treated as independent neurocognitive entities that owe nothing to…
Descriptors: Brain, Sciences, Cognitive Processes
Balaban, Evan – Cognition, 2006
Biological contributions to cognitive development continue to be conceived predominantly along deterministic lines, with proponents of different positions arguing about the preponderance of gene-based versus experience-based influences that organize brain circuits irreversibly during prenatal or early postnatal life, and evolutionary influences…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Biology, Genetics, Evolution
Pennington, Bruce F. – Cognition, 2006
The emerging etiological model for developmental disorders, like dyslexia, is probabilistic and multifactorial while the prevailing cognitive model has been deterministic and often focused on a single cognitive cause, such as a phonological deficit as the cause of dyslexia. So there is a potential contradiction in our explanatory frameworks for…
Descriptors: Models, Developmental Disabilities, Etiology, Dyslexia

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