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Cooper, Myra J. – Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 2011
Imagery is a relatively novel area of interest in eating disorders (EDs). Clinical experience and some research work indicate that rescripting of early memories may be a useful way to modify core beliefs in EDs. Relevant constructs, as applied in the current paper, are defined and described, including core beliefs, imagery rescripting, and early…
Descriptors: Outreach Programs, Eating Disorders, Patients, Clinical Experience
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Fathima, M. Parimala; Sasikumar, N.; Roja, M. Panimalar – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2012
Learning is the acquisition and storage of information as a consequence of experience. The human brain is designed in such a way that thousands bits of sensory data are processed each minute. The brain pays attention to what is relevant to daily life, always asking: "What's going on?" and "How is it important relevant to me?"…
Descriptors: Memory, Learning Processes, Neurosciences, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Adams, Susan A. – ADULTSPAN Journal, 2008
Development of a shame-based identity, also known as "toxic shame," can significantly interfere with an adult's ability to form an intimate relationship with another. As adults find peace from their past using transactional analysis and mental imagery, they learn to empower themselves to form healthy, intimate relationships.
Descriptors: Imagery, Intimacy, Interpersonal Relationship, Psychotherapy
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Ungaro, Don – Clearing House, 1982
Describes the development of a program that used fantasy characters and images to improve the spelling of children. (FL)
Descriptors: Fantasy, Imagery, Imagination, Memory
Brewer, William F.; Pani, John R. – 1984
The four sections of this paper provide an analysis of the structure of human memory. The first section, intended to provide a clear example of personal memory, examines a hypothetical episode in the life of an undergraduate student, and shows how one episode can give rise to three different forms of memory: personal, semantic, and rote…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, Eidetic Imagery
Cypert, Rick – 1987
Freshman composition students were given six assignments designed to help them examine, analyze, and put their memories into context so that the students could use their memories to begin exploring and creating their own "truths" through language. Two essential types of memory were identified: (1) natural memory, memorizing word for word, which…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Eidetic Imagery, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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Morris, Richard; Stuckey, Mary E. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2004
Social images of Indian/white relations, so typically born and nurtured in fiction, frequently seem impervious to fact, circumstance, perspective, or even argument. Despite a public that in record numbers consumed descriptions like the one that closes Dee Brown's 1971 book, for instance, official accounts of the massacre at Wounded Knee--like…
Descriptors: Hearings, Memory, Imagery, American Indian History
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Galvin, Stephen M. – Art Education, 1997
Describes a ninth-grade class project where students were asked to recall a specific sense memory involving smell and foods. They wrote a brief narrative reflecting on the experience and created a recipe card for the food. These were combined with a pictorial representation of the food for a final project. (MJP)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Products, Creative Art, Creative Teaching