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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
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Yang, Chunliang; Yu, Rongjun; Hu, Xiao; Luo, Liang; Huang, Tina S.-T.; Shanks, David R. – Metacognition and Learning, 2021
Judgments of learning (JOLs) play a fundamental role in helping learners regulate their study strategies but are susceptible to various kinds of illusions and biases. These can potentially impair learning efficiency, and hence understanding the mechanisms underlying the formation of JOLs is important. Many studies have suggested that both…
Descriptors: Learning, Evaluative Thinking, Beliefs, Cognitive Processes
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Zengilowski, Allison; Schuetze, Brendan A.; Nash, Brady L.; Schallert, Diane L. – Educational Psychologist, 2021
Refutation texts, rhetorical tools designed to reduce misconceptions, have garnered attention across four decades and many studies. Yet, the ability of a refutation text to change a learner's mind on a topic needs to be qualified and modulated. In this critical review, we bring attention to sources of constraints often overlooked by refutation…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Instructional Materials, Research Problems, Research Methodology
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Janssen, Steve M. J.; Anne, Michele – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2019
Studies examining the influence of alcohol intoxication have reported mixed findings on whether it impairs eyewitness memory. Although the studies in this Special Issue investigated different questions and tested different variables, the findings of these studies collectively provide insight into mechanisms and methodological issues that may…
Descriptors: Memory, Metacognition, Alcohol Abuse, Cognitive Processes
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Caine, Vera; Estefan, Andrew; Clandinin, D. Jean – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2013
In the 25 years since narrative inquiry emerged as a social science research methodology, it has been rapidly taken up in the social sciences. In what is sometimes called a "narrative revolution," researchers with diverse understandings have co-opted the concept of narrative inquiry and used narrative inquiry or narrative research to…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Personal Narratives, Research Methodology, Memory
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Cox, Roy; Hofman, Winni F.; Talamini, Lucia M. – Learning & Memory, 2012
Both sleep spindles and slow oscillations have been implicated in sleep-dependent memory consolidation. Whereas spindles occur during both light and deep sleep, slow oscillations are restricted to deep sleep, raising the possibility of greater consolidation-related spindle involvement during deep sleep. We assessed declarative memory retention…
Descriptors: Memory, Correlation, Sleep, Retention (Psychology)
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Chadwick, Martin J.; Bonnici, Heidi M.; Maguire, Eleanor A. – Neuropsychologia, 2012
Multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA), or "decoding", of fMRI activity has gained popularity in the neuroimaging community in recent years. MVPA differs from standard fMRI analyses by focusing on whether information relating to specific stimuli is encoded in patterns of activity across multiple voxels. If a stimulus can be predicted, or decoded,…
Descriptors: Brain, Neurology, Pathology, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Subramony, Deepak Prem; Molenda, Michael; Betrus, Anthony K.; Thalheimer, Will – Educational Technology, 2014
In response to the wide-scale proliferation of "the cone of learning"--a fanciful retention chart confounded with Dale's Cone of Experience--the authors make four major claims debunking this fantasy and provide documentary evidence to support these claims. The first claim is that the data in the mythical retention chart do not make…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Validity, Data Collection
Subramony, Deepak Prem; Molenda, Michael; Betrus, Anthony K.; Thalheimer, Will – Educational Technology, 2014
Critics have been attempting to debunk the mythical retention chart at least since 1971. The earliest critics, David Curl and Frank Dwyer, were addressing just the retention data. Beginning around 2002, a new generation of critics has taken on the illegitimate combination of the retention chart and Edgar Dale's Cone of Experience--the corrupted…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Validity, Data Collection
Subramony, Deepak Prem; Molenda, Michael; Betrus, Anthony K.; Thalheimer, Will – Educational Technology, 2014
The authors are attempting to set the record straight regarding the sources frequently cited in the literature of the mythical retention chart and the corrupted Dale's Cone. They point out citations that do not actually connect with relevant works; provide correct citations of sources that are often cited erroneously; add references for overlooked…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Validity, Data Collection
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Bostrom, Robert N. – International Journal of Listening, 2011
Theory about listening has been strongly affected by methodological orientations and institutional pressures. It would help if researchers spent more time on the objects of study rather than method. Traditional listening research has confused listening with general cognitive abilities, such as IQ. Studying listening as memory is a tempting…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Cognitive Ability, Second Language Instruction, Listening Skills
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Chae, Yoojin; Goodman, Gail S.; Bederian-Gardner, Daniel; Lindsay, Adam – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 2011
Scientific studies of child maltreatment victims' memory abilities and court experiences have important legal, psychological, and clinical implications. However, state-of-the-art research on child witnesses is often hindered by methodological challenges. In this paper, we address specific problems investigators may encounter when attempting such…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Confidentiality, Interviews, Memory
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Kesner, Raymond P.; Goodrich-Hunsaker, Naomi J. – Neuropsychologia, 2010
This review summarizes a series of experiments aimed at answering the question whether the hippocampus in rats can serve as an animal model of amnesia. It is recognized that a comparison of the functions of the rat hippocampus with human hippocampus is difficult, because of differences in methodology, differences in complexity of life experiences,…
Descriptors: Animals, Sequential Learning, Memory, Models
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Skåreus, Eva – Education Inquiry, 2012
Reflecting on the implementation of a pre-study may be decisive for the design of a following main study. This text consists of a reflective process where the researcher's different choices are examined and problematised. The reflections take place within the framework of a pre-study and in relation to the aim of that study. They also take place…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Resistance (Psychology), Memory, Writing Processes
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Bjerg, Helle; Rasmussen, Lisa Rosen – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2008
Two studies of the formation of pupils' subjectivities within the Danish school and educational system in the period 1945-2005 create the framework for a methodological discussion of how subjectivities in educational history can be studied. Both studies use qualitative interviews as a way of studying subject formations in educational history. This…
Descriptors: Educational History, Use Studies, Reflection, Foreign Countries
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Smith, Glenn E.; Wong, Jennifer S.; Ivnik, Robert J.; Malec, James F. – Assessment, 1997
Norms are presented for persons ages 56 to 93 years for each story from the Logical Memory subtests of the revised edition of the Wechsler Memory Scale following the methods used for other Mayo's Older American Normative Studies. Means and standard deviations are presented for 3-year interval age groups from age 61 to 88. (SLD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Memory, Norms, Older Adults
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