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The effect of exposure conditions on the perceptual learning of a discrimination taskWalent, Nellie January 1963 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University
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The validation of Sensory System ProfilingMale, Robert A. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1980. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 111-121).
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The effects of systematic practice in the development of visual motor control for pre-writing skills in severely learning disabled studentsKerson, Diane Joan. January 1976 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 28).
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The application of workload measurement techniques to the specification of helicopter crew dutiesElwell, R. S. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Age, intelligence and motor developmentBankhead, Ivan January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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An Evaluation of the Effect of a Specific Perceptual Training Program on Classroom Skills in KindergartenCook, Grace H. 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the evaluation was to test effectiveness of a visual, visual-motor, and auditory perceptual skills training program devised by Dr. Jerome Rosner, and to confirm or deny application of this training to improved classroom skills. Subjects were 38 kindergarten children, 20 in the Contrast Group, and 18 in the Experimental Group. Both groups received the same training in the basic curriculum of readiness skills. The Experimental Group also received training in the Visual Analysis and Auditory Analysis Skills programs. Pretests and posttests were administered, tabulated, and analyzed. Differences in raw score means were sufficient to indicate more than a chance factor and all tests demonstrated a plus factor for children in the Experimental Group.
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The relationship of set and the defense of repression to perceptual recognitionSlatoff, Jack Lawrence January 1962 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University. / The general problem investigated in this research was the relationship of set and the defense of repression to perceptual recognition. A. comparison was made of the perceptual recognition threshold scores and the slope scores af a High Repressor and a Low Repressor group on three series of pictures -- an Aggressive series, a Neutral with a Theme series, and a Neutral without a Theme series.
Three hundred and eighty-six students were administered a sentence-completion test which was used as the defense measure. This test was devised specifically to assess the repression of aggression. On the basis of extreme scores on this test, twenty-four subjects were selected as a High Repressor group and twenty-four subjects as a Low Repressor group. A Medium Repressor group was selected from the scores tbat fell between the High Repressor and the Low Repressor groups. Each member of these groups was individually administered a perceptual recognition task [TRUNCATED]
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Shared spatial attention for action selection and action monitoringMahon, Aoife January 2017 (has links)
Dual-task studies have shown higher sensitivity for stimuli presented at the targets of upcoming actions. Generally, movement outcome feedback is also obtained at action targets. This thesis examined whether attention is directed to action targets for the purpose of action selection, as previously concluded, or if attention is directed to monitor feedback about movement outcomes as supported by skilled-action research. Across seven experiments, participants executed either a pointing movement (Experiments 1 – 5) or a saccade (Experiments 6 and 7), while simultaneously identifying a discrimination target ('E' or '3') among distractors (2s and 5s). Action targets were generally cued by a central arrow. Discrimination target identification accuracy measured attention allocation. Crucially, movement accuracy feedback was presented at a spatially separate location from the action target. It was found that during the planning of goal-directed actions, attention is allocated to monitor movement outcomes, even if this information is provided at a spatially separate location from the action target. Attending the separate feedback location resulted in slower reaction times and less accurate pointing. Clear and consistent perceptual enhancement was also demonstrated at the action target location, even when no intrinsic or extrinsic feedback about the action could have been gained from attending there. Specific to saccades, it was found that attention is allocated before saccade execution to both the saccade goal and to the predicted future retinal location of feedback information. Lastly, perceptual performance is greater in general when participants perform the dual-task visually open-loop, that is without visual feedback from the moving hand. These results are novel in showing that attention appears to be required for action target selection, independently of the need to monitor expected locations of feedback.
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Expertise and the acquisition of perceptual-motor skill /Farrow, Damian. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Queensland, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Information over function: a reappraisal of the perception-action modelDe Wit, Mattheus Maria. January 2013 (has links)
In the influential perception-action model, the ventral visual system of the primate brain serves to obtain knowledge of objects in the environment, while the dorsal system serves to control actions in interaction with those objects. In recent years, criticism of the model has gained momentum following reports of evidence that involvement of the two systems may not principally depend on whether observers are engaged in action or perception tasks. This thesis appraises the perception-action model over the course of five experiments that test a number of the model’s central assertions. Evidence for an alternative functional characterization of the dorsal and ventral systems is obtained. Specifically, the evidence suggests that the dorsal system can be involved in both action and perception on the basis of fast egocentric information pickup, while the ventral system can be involved in both perception and action on the basis of slower allocentric information pickup. This raises the possibility that a more fundamental distinction pertains to the characteristics of information pickup by the two systems rather than to the behavioral functions subserved.
The thesis develops a stance in which involvement of the two systems in the visual guidance of behavior is dependent on their operational characteristics in combination with the constraints of the task. The proposed relevant task constraints are: (i) whether tasks allow for egocentric and/or allocentric information pickup, (ii) the amount of time that is available for information pickup in a task and, possibly, (iii) whether stimuli are located within or outside functional space (the space that affords action for an observer). Whether a task requires an immediate or a delayed response is of less importance. It is argued that while the typical requirements of perception and action tasks bring about a tight coupling between perception and the ventral system and action and the dorsal system, this coupling is not invariant; perception can involve fast egocentric information pickup and action can involve slower allocentric information pickup. The findings are discussed in the context of higher-level theories of visual perception. It is proposed that the view of the dorsal and ventral visual systems that is suggested by the findings presented in this thesis corresponds better with ecological than with constructivist approaches to visual perception. / published_or_final_version / Human Performance / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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