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Showing 1 to 15 of 101 results Save | Export
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Wieman, Carl – Physics Teacher, 2015
Undergraduate instructional labs in physics generate intense opinions. Their advocates are passionate as to their importance for teaching physics as an experimental activity and providing "hands-on" learning experiences, while their detractors (often but not entirely students) offer harsh criticisms that they are pointless, confusing and…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Undergraduate Study, College Science, Science Experiments
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Ohlsson, Stellan; Cosejo, David G. – Science & Education, 2014
The problem of how people process novel and unexpected information--"deep learning" (Ohlsson in "Deep learning: how the mind overrides experience." Cambridge University Press, New York, 2011)--is central to several fields of research, including creativity, belief revision, and conceptual change. Researchers have not converged…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Scientific Concepts, Change Strategies, Concept Formation
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Mirolli, Marco – Cognitive Science, 2012
Understanding the role of "representations" in cognitive science is a fundamental problem facing the emerging framework of embodied, situated, dynamical cognition. To make progress, I follow the approach proposed by an influential representational skeptic, Randall Beer: building artificial agents capable of minimally cognitive behaviors and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Science, Cognitive Processes, Experiments, Classification
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Moons, Jan; De Backer, Carlos – Computers & Education, 2013
This article presents the architecture and evaluation of a novel environment for programming education. The design of this programming environment, and the way it is used in class, is based on the findings of constructivist and cognitivist learning paradigms. The environment is evaluated based on qualitative student and teacher evaluations and…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Cognitive Processes, Programming, Constructivism (Learning)
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da Costa, Laura; Remedios, Richard – Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2014
Achievement goal theory is one of the most popular theories of achievement motivation. Techniques researchers have used to assess goals include standardized questionnaires and interviews. One curious finding is that participants whose self-report questionnaire responses strongly indicate they operate with a performance goal do not make performance…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Goal Orientation, Questionnaires, Interviews
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Scontras, Gregory; Graff, Peter; Goodman, Noah D. – Cognition, 2012
What does it mean to compare sets of objects along a scale, for example by saying "the men are taller than the women"? We explore comparison of pluralities in two experiments, eliciting comparison judgments while varying the properties of the members of each set. We find that a plurality is judged as "bigger" when the mean size of its members is…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Experiments, Mathematical Concepts, Evaluation Methods
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Bijleveld, Erik; Custers, Ruud; Aarts, Henk – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
When in pursuit of rewards, humans weigh the value of potential rewards against the amount of effort that is required to attain them. Although previous research has generally conceptualized this process as a deliberate calculation, recent work suggests that rudimentary mechanisms--operating without conscious intervention--play an important role as…
Descriptors: Priming, Rewards, Psychological Studies, Experiments
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Taylor, Eric G.; Ahn, Woo-kyoung – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
Suppose one observes a correlation between two events, B and C, and infers that B causes C. Later one discovers that event A explains away the correlation between B and C. Normatively, one should now dismiss or weaken the belief that B causes C. Nonetheless, participants in the current study who observed a positive contingency between B and C…
Descriptors: Evidence, Prior Learning, Bayesian Statistics, Correlation
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Vanyukov, Polina M.; Warren, Tessa; Wheeler, Mark E.; Reichle, Erik D. – Cognition, 2012
A visual search experiment employed strings of Landolt "C"s to examine how the gap size of and frequency of exposure to distractor strings affected eye movements. Increases in gap size were associated with shorter first-fixation durations, gaze durations, and total times, as well as fewer fixations. Importantly, both the number and duration of…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Human Body, Experiments, Time Factors (Learning)
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Hu, Yi; Ericsson, K. Anders – Cognitive Psychology, 2012
In a recent paper, Hu, Ericsson, Yang, and Lu (2009) found that an ability to memorize very long lists of digits is not mediated by the same mechanisms as exceptional memory for rapidly presented lists, which has been the traditional focus of laboratory research. Chao Lu is the holder of the "Guinness World Record" for reciting the most decimal…
Descriptors: Evidence, Hypermedia, Short Term Memory, Laboratories
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Bogartz, Richard S.; Staub, Adrian – Cognition, 2012
In three experimental tasks Stephen and Mirman (2010) measured gaze steps, the distance in pixels between gaze positions on successive samples from an eyetracker. They argued that the distribution of gaze steps is best fit by the lognormal distribution, and based on this analysis they concluded that interactive cognitive processes underlie eye…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Cognitive Processes, Experiments, Task Analysis
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Strohminger, Nina; Lewis, Richard L.; Meyer, David E. – Cognition, 2011
Positive emotions are often treated as relatively similar in their cognitive-behavioral effects, and as having unambiguously beneficial consequences. For example, Valdesolo and DeSteno (2006) reported that a humorous video made people more prone to choose a utilitarian solution to a moral dilemma. They attributed this finding to increased positive…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Moral Issues, Value Judgment, Experiments
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ErEl, Hadas; Meiran, Nachshon – Cognition, 2011
Rule finding is an important aspect of human reasoning and flexibility. Previous studies associated rule finding "failure" with past experience with the test stimuli and stable personality traits. We additionally show that rule finding performance is severely impaired by a mindset associated with applying an instructed rule. The mindset was…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Personality Traits, Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
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Riby, Deborah M.; Doherty-Sneddon, Gwyneth; Whittle, Lisa – Developmental Science, 2012
Visual communication cues facilitate interpersonal communication. It is important that we look at faces to retrieve and subsequently process such cues. It is also important that we sometimes look away from faces as they increase cognitive load that may interfere with online processing. Indeed, when typically developing individuals hold face gaze…
Descriptors: Cues, Nonverbal Communication, Interpersonal Communication, Autism
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Kentner, Gerrit – Cognition, 2012
Various recent studies attest that reading involves creating an implicit prosodic representation of the written text which may systematically affect the resolution of syntactic ambiguities in sentence comprehension. Research up to now suggests that implicit prosody itself depends on a partial syntactic analysis of the text, raising the question of…
Descriptors: Evidence, Sentences, Speech, Silent Reading
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