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Baptiste Van Eeckhout; Nicolas Michinov; Karine Le Rudulier – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
For several decades, brainstorming in groups and its variants have been widely examined in research as a technique to produce ideas. The way to stimulate elaboration by linking ideas to those previously given by others during a brainstorming session is a challenge for researchers and practitioners aiming to go beyond idea generation. Despite…
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Group Activities
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Vertolli, Michael O.; Kelly, Matthew A.; Davies, Jim – Cognitive Science, 2018
An incoherent visualization is when aspects of different senses of a word (e.g., the biological "mouse" vs. the computer "mouse") are present in the same visualization (e.g., a visualization of a biological mouse in the same image with a computer tower). We describe and implement a new model of creating contextual coherence in…
Descriptors: Visualization, Imagination, Models, Association (Psychology)
Hayes-Roth, Frederick – 1977
One of the most typical ways in which people learn is by inferring general rules from examples. In recent years, significant progress has been made toward understanding how learning from examples can occur, determining when it does occur, and identifying conditions that promote it. This paper reviews these results and then suggests a program of…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Concept Formation
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Swanson, Rosemary A.; And Others – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1979
This study examined the relative influence of observation, feedback in training seriation, and imitative motor activity in facilitating conceptual development. (CM)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Feedback, Imitation
Tennyson, Robert D.; Steve, Michael H. – 1973
In the first of three studies, separately reported, the effects of prompting and sequencing on a science concept task were studied with college students. The data analysis showed that the prompting procedure was significantly different from a no-prompting condition; prompting seemed to negate the affect of the defined concept instructional…
Descriptors: College Students, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching, Grade 7
Henderson, Ronald W.; Swanson, Rosemary – 1975
A second year of experimental research on young children examined the instructional power of television in facilitating the acquisition of cognitive skills. In addition, researchers investigated the efficiency of an instructional support system designed to maximize the results of educational television. Subjects were three- to five-year-old Native…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Compensation (Concept), Concept Formation