English Theme 3 Sample presentation (2)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dyslexia Parent Meeting
Advertisements

Psychology: A Modular Approach to Mind and Behavior, Tenth Edition, Dennis Coon Appendix Appendix: Behavioral Statistics.
Table of Contents Exit Appendix Behavioral Statistics.
Experiment 2: MEG Study Materials and Methods: 11 right-handed subjects with 20:20 vision were run. 3 subjects’ data was discarded because of poor performance.
Perception Putting it together. Sensation vs. Perception A somewhat artificial distinction Sensation: Analysis –Extraction of basic perceptual features.
Mental visual imagery – can a language encoded object generate depictive imagery? Igor Bascandziev Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Pattern Recognition Pattern - complex composition of sensory stimuli that the human observer may recognize as being a member of a class of objects Issue.
Feature Searches The next slide contains some numbers and letters. Flash it up and try to get a feeling of the individual cognitive processes that you.
Recognition. Evolution of Recognition Procedural memory includes perceptual- motor skills Automatic activation of specific actions in response to specific.
Experimental and Quasi- experimental Method September 16,2008.
Face Recognition Using EigenFaces Presentation by: Zia Ahmed Shaikh (P/IT/2K15/07) Authors: Matthew A. Turk and Alex P. Pentland Vision and Modeling Group,
Academic Vocabulary These are words students should know and be able to use in their own vocabulary.
Learning Part II. Overview Habituation Classical conditioning Instrumental/operant conditioning Observational learning.
Making Science Accessible to English Learners: A Guidebook for Teachers Chapter 7: Applying Strategies in the Classroom, pp. 95–133 Carr, J., Sexton, U.,
Teuvo Kohonen Dr. Eng., Emeritus Professor of the Academy of Finland; Academician Since the 1960s, Professor Kohonen has introduced several new concepts.
The Strategy Unit Plan. Begin by noting the name of the writing strategy students will learn PLANS essay strategy.
Asymptotes Objective: -Be able to find vertical and horizontal asymptotes.
Do Now: Explain what an asymptote is in your own words.
Graphing Data in Science Looking for a pattern. Why use a graph? Easier to analyze data Visualize patterns in the data Looks for trends.
Reflection. Reflection A Mirror Google “Self-Portrait” – – Closely examine 3-4 different self-portraits – Respond in your.
Introduction to Excel The Basics of Microsoft Word 2007 Excel.
Introduction to Excel The Basics of Microsoft Excel 2010.
English Theme Date: Apr 24, 2007 Room: Instructor: Mafuyu Kitahara Material: Thelen, E. (1995) “Time-scale dynamics and the development.
Inhibition Chris Jung Department of Integrative Physiology 09/23/08.
Function Of Microsoft Words Tables. Where Table section is located Table section is located on top row with File, Edit, View, Insert, Format, Tools, Window.
Chapter 3: Sensation and Perception Sensation: activity of receptor organs Perception: interpretation of sensory system activity Visual system organization:
Phonological Awareness By: Christine McCreary, Marissa Abram & Ting Ting Chou.
NAME ____________________________________ DATE ____________________ PERIOD ______Samples & Populations: Problem 2.3 – Choosing Random Samples You are going.
Chapter 15: Analytical evaluation. Aims: Describe inspection methods. Show how heuristic evaluation can be adapted to evaluate different products. Explain.
English Theme Date: Apr 24, 2007 Room: Instructor: Mafuyu Kitahara Material: Thelen, E. (1995) “Time-scale dynamics and the development.
ETT pp Time: Tuesday 10:40-12:10 Room: Instructor: Mafuyu Kitahara Material: Balota D. A. (1994) “Visual word recognition” in.
Unit 3 Vocabulary Amelia N.. Algebraic Expression An expression that contains a variable. Examples: 10/p=2 p+11=20.
An Eyetracking Analysis of the Effect of Prior Comparison on Analogical Mapping Catherine A. Clement, Eastern Kentucky University Carrie Harris, Tara Weatherholt,
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary 1 Interactive Pattern Discovery with Mirage Mirage uses exploratory visualization, intuitive graphical operations to.
Presentation III : Campaig NM3420 AUDIENCE CONTEXT ANALYSIS 9.
By: Jennifer L. Haddon.  Hypermedia is beneficial for multiple document searches  Control over information access may not benefit everyone  Certain.
VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION. What is Word Recognition? Features, letters & word interactions Interactive Activation Model Lexical and Sublexical Approach.
Isometric Circles.
English Theme 45 (Spring 2007) Time: Tuesday 13:00-14:30 Room: Instructor: Mafuyu Kitahara Material: Thelen, E. (1995) “Time-scale dynamics and the.
Lesson Concept: Dot Plots and Bar Graphs
Copyright © American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Effects of Working Memory on Spontaneous Recognition
Chapter Five MONITORING STUDENT.
Testing V.A in verbal children
Rational Functions: Graphs, Applications, and Models
Horizontal Line Test.
Figure Legend: From: Measuring visual clutter
Working Group on Recognition of Academic Qualifications
High School English vs. College Composition
© 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved
English Theme 45 pp Date: June 26, 2007 Room: 8-405
Spatial Distance Affects Implicit Impressions of Others
Pattern Recognition Binding Edge Detection
Graphing in Mr. Gentry’s Room
FRENCH HIGH SCHOOL FRENCH I
Evaluation.
English Theme 8 Music and Memory sample presentation
English Theme 3 Sample presentation (4)
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 7 – Behavior & Its Consequences
Cat.
English Theme 3 (Spring 2007)
Graphing Skills Practice
English Theme 8 Music and Memory sample presentation
(Free to use. May not be sold)
English Theme 45 pp Date: June 12, 2007 Room: 8-405
English Theme end Date: July 3rd, 2007 Room: 8-405
Warm up 19 1.) Graph using 3 points x +3y =6
pp Time: Tuesday 10:40-12:10 Room: 8-309
English Theme p.87 Date: June 5, 2007 Room: 8-405
Presentation transcript:

English Theme 3 Sample presentation (2) Date: 2007-05-01 Room: 8-309 Instructor: Mafuyu Kitahara Material: Balota D. A. (1994) “Visual word recognition” in M. A. Gernsbacher (ed.) Handbook of Psycholinguistics, pp. 303-358, San Diego: Academic Press.

Classic Variables Variables: things/numbers you can measure in an experiment Frequency: H=”law”, L=”linguistics” Familiarity: (as for me) H=”linguistics”, L=”lawyer” Meaningfulness: nonword=not meaningful Context: letters/words around the target

Features Feature: basic, primitive, smaller units Evidence Horizontal lines, vertical lines, closed curves, open curves, intersections, cyclic redundancy... Evidence Behavior: easily explained by features Confusion among similar letters Easier searching among non-similar letters Neurological: cells sensitive to primitive features Cats raised in vertical environment PET study on human

Pandemonium 3 steps Problem 28 feature demons Cognitive demons for each letter Decision demon Problem Glue? Distortion? Hand writing? Can read? Word-level?