نتایج جستجو برای: cartoons

تعداد نتایج: 977  

2011
Cristina Costa Helen Keegan Graham Attwell

The young learners of today tend to show little enthusiasm for formal schooling. This does not necessarily mean pupils are not interested in learning or developing new skills and competences. In fact, the opposite often happens in the informal settings they belong to. Finding ways of transferring pupil’s informal learning to the school setting is therefore important. This paper gives a brief ov...

Journal: :Neuropsychologia 2000
H L Gallagher F Happé N Brunswick P C Fletcher U Frith C D Frith

Previous functional imaging studies have explored the brain regions activated by tasks requiring 'theory of mind'--the attribution of mental states. Tasks used have been primarily verbal, and it has been unclear to what extent different results have reflected different tasks, scanning techniques, or genuinely distinct regions of activation. Here we report results from a functional magnetic reso...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 2008
Takahiko Masuda Phoebe C Ellsworth Batja Mesquita Janxin Leu Shigehito Tanida Ellen Van de Veerdonk

Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people's emotions from their facial expressions, Japanese, more than Westerners, incorporate information from the social context. In Study 1, participants viewed cartoons depicting a happy, sad, angry, or neutral person surrounded by other people expressing the same emotion as the central person or a different one. The surrounding people's emoti...

2006
Steven J. Kirsh

This manuscript reviews the literature concerning the effects of animated violence on aggressive behavior in youth. It begins with an overview of the research on children's and adolescents' perceptions of violence in cartoons. Next, the effects of cartoon violence on aggressive behavior across development are reviewed. In each section, the importance of the presence (or absence) of comedic elem...

Journal: :Cognition 2013
Marine Buon Pierre Jacob Elsa Loissel Emmanuel Dupoux

In situations where an agent unintentionally causes harm to a victim, the agent's (harmless) intention typically carries more weight than his/her (harmful) causal role. Therefore, healthy adults typically judge leniently agents responsible for an accident. Using animated cartoons, we show, however, that in the presence of a difficult concurrent task, this result is reversed: the agent's harmles...

2014
Michaela Riediger Markus Studtmann Andrea Westphal Antje Rauers Hannelore Weber

People smile in various emotional contexts, for example, when they are amused or angry or simply being polite. We investigated whether younger and older adults differ in how well they are able to identify the emotional experiences accompanying smile expressions, and whether the age of the smiling person plays a role in this respect. With this aim, we produced 80 video episodes of three types of...

2017
Maya Hickmann Henriëtte Hendriks Marianne Gullberg

Recent research shows that adult speakers of verbvs. satellite-framed languages (Talmy, 2000) express motion events in language-specific ways in speech (Slobin 1996, 2004) and co-verbal gestures (Duncan 2005; Kita & Özyurek 2003; McNeill 1992). Although such findings suggest cross-linguistic differences in the expression of events, little is still known about their implications for first langua...

2016
Katarina Gvozdic Sylvain Moutier Emmanuel Dupoux Marine Buon

Typically, adults give a primary role to the agent's intention to harm when performing a moral judgment of accidental harm. By contrast, children often focus on outcomes, underestimating the actor's mental states when judging someone for his action, and rely on what we suppose to be intuitive and emotional processes. The present study explored the processes involved in the development of the ca...

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