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Burcu Arslan; Francis Ng; Tilbe Göksun; Nazbanou Nozari – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Information can be conveyed via multiple channels such as verbal and gestural (visual) channels during communication. Sometimes the information from different channels does not match (e.g., saying right while pointing to the left). How do addressees choose which information to act upon in such cases? In two experiments, we investigated this issue…
Descriptors: Verbal Communication, Nonverbal Communication, Short Term Memory, Feedback (Response)
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Wei Li; Cheng-Ye Liu; Judy C. R. Tseng – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2024
Collaborative programming helps improve students' computational thinking and increases their confidence in solving programming problems. However, the effect of collaborative learning is not ideal because it is difficult for students to mobilize metacognition to regulate learning spontaneously. To guide students to effectively regulate the learning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Junior High School Students, Metacognition, Academic Achievement
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Park, Namgyoo Kenny; Jang, Wanjin; Thomas, Evan Leigh; Smith, Joshua – Creativity Research Journal, 2021
What makes teams creative? We investigated how the diversity and agreeableness of team members moderate the relationship between creative self-efficacy (CSE) and innovative performance at the team level. We found that the educational background diversity is a critical factor to affect the knowledge, perspective, and problem-solving skills and, in…
Descriptors: Group Dynamics, Creativity, Self Efficacy, Group Behavior
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Weissberg, Robert – Journal of School Choice, 2012
This article presents the author's response to Robert Maranto's review of "Bad Students, Not Bad Schools". The author begins by thanking Professor Maranto for his thoughtful review of his "Bad Students, Not Bad Schools" (2010). Professor Maranto is the first professional educator to acknowledge the book's existence, a fact that says much about…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Intelligence Quotient, Intelligence Differences, Group Behavior
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Yu, Chen; Yurovsky, Daniel; Xu, Tian – Infancy, 2012
Infant eye movements are an important behavioral resource to understand early human development and learning. But the complexity and amount of gaze data recorded from state-of-the-art eye-tracking systems also pose a challenge: how does one make sense of such dense data? Toward this goal, this article describes an interactive approach based on…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Visual Aids, Data Analysis
Page, Scott E. – Princeton University Press, 2008
In this landmark book, Scott Page redefines the way we understand ourselves in relation to one another. "The Difference" is about how we think in groups--and how our collective wisdom exceeds the sum of its parts. Why can teams of people find better solutions than brilliant individuals working alone? And why are the best group decisions…
Descriptors: Democracy, Expertise, Student Diversity, Cultural Pluralism
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Lee, Michael D.; Paradowski, Michael J. – Journal of Problem Solving, 2007
We consider group decision-making on an optimal stopping problem, for which large and stable individual differences have previously been established. In the problem, people are presented with a sequence of five random numbers between 0 and 100, one at a time, and are required to choose the maximum of the sequence, without being allowed to return…
Descriptors: Participative Decision Making, Problem Solving, Individual Differences, Comparative Analysis