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Chan, Kennedy Kam Ho; Xu, Lihua; Cooper, Rebecca; Berry, Amanda; van Driel, Jan H. – Studies in Science Education, 2021
In recent years, teacher noticing has emerged as a construct to capture the dynamic and situational aspects of teaching expertise that underlies teachers' in-the-moment teaching decisions and actions. In mathematics education research, in particular, teacher noticing has been studied to understand how teachers attend to, and make sense of,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Observation, Science Education, Science Instruction
Dumas, Denis – Educational Psychology Review, 2017
This review brings together the literature that pertains to the role of relational reasoning, or the ability to discern meaningful patterns within any stream of information, in the mental work of scientists, medical doctors, and engineers. Existing studies that measure four forms of relational reasoning--analogy, anomaly, antinomy, and…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Sciences, Medicine, Engineering
Jarodzka, Halszka; Boshuizen, Henny P. . – Frontline Learning Research, 2017
Visual expertise in medicine has been a subject of research since many decades. Interestingly, it has been investigated from two little related fields, namely the field that focused mainly on the visual search aspects whilst ignoring higher-level cognitive processes involved in medical expertise, and the field that mainly focused on these…
Descriptors: Medicine, Expertise, Cognitive Processes, Vision
Hutner, Todd L.; Markman, Arthur B. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2017
Two anomalies continue to confound researchers and science teacher educators. First, new science teachers are quick to discard the pedagogy and practices that they learn in their teacher education programs in favor of a traditional, didactic approach to teaching science. Second, a discrepancy exists at all stages of science teachers' careers…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Teacher Education, Goal Orientation
Simmt, Elaine; Kieren, Tom – ZDM: The International Journal on Mathematics Education, 2015
In this paper the authors reflect on the contents of this current issue of ZDM and ask why focus an entire issue on enactivism as a research methodology in mathematics education. In their synthesis of the papers they distinguish and explicate what they observe as three moves in the enactivist research discussed. The first move (and the one that…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Research, Journal Articles, Content Analysis
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
Blackford, Trevor; Holcomb, Phillip J.; Grainger, Jonathan; Kuperberg, Gina R. – Cognition, 2012
We measured Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) and naming times to picture targets preceded by masked words (stimulus onset asynchrony: 80 ms) that shared one of three different types of relationship with the names of the pictures: (1) Identity related, in which the prime was the name of the picture ("socks"--[picture of socks]), (2) Phonemic Onset…
Descriptors: Priming, Phonemics, Semantics, Cognitive Processes
Kaune, Christa; Nowinska, Edyta; Paetau, Annika; Griep, Mathilde – Indonesian Mathematical Society Journal on Mathematics Education, 2013
The results of international comparative studies have shown that relationships exist between metacognition and cognitive activation and learning success. Since 2007 we have been carrying out projects in Indonesia to improve cognitive and metacognitive activities of pupils of year 7 and their teachers. These activities are to contribute to the…
Descriptors: Sustainability, Educational Games, Mathematics Instruction, Grade 7
Sartori, Luisa; Becchio, Cristina; Castiello, Umberto – Cognition, 2011
Body movement provides a rich source of cues about other people's goals and intentions. In the present research, we investigate how well people can distinguish between different social intentions on the basis of movement information. Participants observed a model reaching toward and grasping a wooden block with the intent to cooperate with a…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Role, Intention
Beck, Sarah R.; Apperly, Ian A.; Chappell, Jackie; Guthrie, Carlie; Cutting, Nicola – Cognition, 2011
Tool making evidences intelligent, flexible thinking. In Experiment 1, we confirmed that 4- to 7-year-olds chose a hook tool to retrieve a bucket from a tube. In Experiment 2, 3- to 5-year-olds consistently failed to innovate a simple hook tool. Eight-year-olds performed at mature levels. In contrast, making a tool following demonstration was easy…
Descriptors: Experiments, Children, Thinking Skills, Age Differences
Mathewson, Kyle E.; Fabiani, Monica; Gratton, Gabriele; Beck, Diane M.; Lleras, Alejandro – Cognition, 2010
At near-threshold levels of stimulation, identical stimulus parameters can result in very different phenomenal experiences. Can we manipulate which stimuli reach consciousness? Here we show that consciousness of otherwise masked stimuli can be experimentally induced by sensory entrainment. We preceded a backward-masked stimulus with a series of…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Item Response Theory, Cognitive Processes, Evaluation Methods
Dosher, Barbara Anne; Han, Songmei; Lu, Zhong-Lin – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Difficult visual search is often attributed to time-limited serial attention operations, although neural computations in the early visual system are parallel. Using probabilistic search models (Dosher, Han, & Lu, 2004) and a full time-course analysis of the dynamics of covert visual search, we distinguish unlimited capacity parallel versus serial…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Human Body, Search Strategies, Attention
Nersessian, Nancy J. – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2012
As much research has demonstrated, novel scientific concepts do not arise fully formed in the head of a scientist but are created in problem-solving processes, which can extend for considerable periods and even span generations of scientists. To understand concept formation and conceptual change it is important to investigate these processes in…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, Sciences
Frischen, Alexandra; Loach, Daniel; Tipper, Steven P. – Cognition, 2009
Selective attention is usually considered an egocentric mechanism, biasing sensory information based on its behavioural relevance to oneself. This study provides evidence for an equivalent allocentric mechanism that allows passive observers to selectively attend to information from the perspective of another person. In a negative priming task,…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Attention, Observation, Perspective Taking
Turella, Luca; Pierno, Andrea C.; Tubaldi, Federico; Castiello, Umberto – Brain and Language, 2009
The widely known discovery of mirror neurons in macaques shows that premotor and parietal cortical areas are not only involved in executing one's own movement, but are also active when observing the action of others. The goal of this essay is to critically evaluate the substance of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission…
Descriptors: Neurology, Diagnostic Tests, Motion, Psychomotor Skills