نتایج جستجو برای: iconic and stereotypical signs

تعداد نتایج: 16831551  

Journal: :Perception & Psychophysics 1971

2011
A. O. Dick

The experiments discussed in this report do not have a direct relationship to each other but represent work on a series of sub-issues within the general framework of visual processing of information. Because of this discreteness, the report is organized into a series of papers. The first is a general review of tachistoscopic work on iconic memory and issues related to iconic memory. Following t...

Journal: :Applied clinical informatics 2010
Philip R O Payne Peter J Embi Stephen B Johnson Eneida Mendonca Justin Starren

OBJECTIVE: Rigorous human-computer interaction (HCI) design methodologies have not traditionally been applied to the development of clinical trial participant tracking (CTPT) tools. Given the frequent us of iconic HCI models in CTPTs, and prior evidence of usability problems associated with the use of ambiguous icons in complex interfaces, such approaches may be problematic. Presentation Discov...

2015
Eimear Finnegan Jane Oakhill Alan Garnham

The present research investigated the use of counter-stereotypical pictures as a strategy for overcoming spontaneous gender stereotypes when certain social role nouns and professional terms are read. Across two experiments, participants completed a judgment task in which they were presented with word pairs comprised of a role noun with a stereotypical gender bias (e.g., beautician) and a kinshi...

Journal: :J. Artificial Societies and Social Simulation 2009
Andrew T. Crooks Andrew Hudson-Smith Joel Dearden

Urban models can be seen on a continuum between iconic and symbolic. Generally speaking, iconic models are physical versions of the real world at some scaled down representation, while symbolic models represent the system in terms of the way they function replacing the physical or material system by some logical and/or mathematical formulae. Traditionally iconic and symbolic models were distinc...

2009
Andrew Crooks Andrew Hudson-Smith Joel Dearden

Urban models can be seen on a continuum between iconic and symbolic. Generally speaking, iconic models are physical versions of the real world at some scaled down representation, while symbolic models represent the system in terms of the way they function replacing the physical or material system by some logical and/or mathematical formulae. Traditionally iconic and symbolic models were distinc...

Journal: :Neuropsychologia 2015
Lotte Meteyard Emily Stoppard Dee Snudden Stefano F Cappa Gabriella Vigliocco

Iconicity is the non-arbitrary relation between properties of a phonological form and semantic content (e.g. "moo", "splash"). It is a common feature of both spoken and signed languages, and recent evidence shows that iconic forms confer an advantage during word learning. We explored whether iconic forms conferred a processing advantage for 13 individuals with aphasia following left-hemisphere ...

2017

While language conveys meaning largely symbolically, actual communication acts typically contain iconic elements as well: People gesture while they speak, or may even draw sketches while explaining something. Image retrieval prima facie seems like a task that could profit from combined symbolic and iconic reference, but it is typically set up to work either from language only, or via (iconic) s...

Aghdas Babadi, Gholamhosein Nazemzadegan, Khalil Kakavandi, Zeinab Zeinali,

Objectives: The incidence of stereotyped behaviors is one of the major symptoms of diagnosis of individuals with autism spectrum disorder that causes disruption in daily life. This study aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of ball exercises on the reduction of stereotypical behavior of children with autism spectrum disorder. Methods: In this study, 16 children (boys) with autism spectrum dis...

2015
Tikenya Joseph Leslie Hodges Şeyda Özçalışkan Rebecca Williamson

Iconic gestures convey substantive information not found in speech by expressing actions or attributes associated with objects. An earlier study with adult speakers (Beattie & Shovelton, 2002) showed that adult speakers are particularly good at gleaning information from iconic gestures that use a character viewpoint (CVP; e.g., “It goes like this”+flapping arms to convey BIRD FLYING)—gestures t...

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