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Ling Wu; Shuxin Wang – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Contemporary technological advancements offer new possibilities for enhancing user creativity. We aimed to explore how technology can boost student creativity to meet the twenty-first century's demand for innovative talent. Based on the 4P model of creativity (person, process, product, and press) and constructivist theory, a virtual reality (VR)…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Brain, Biofeedback, Creativity
Kalpana Gupta – Journal of Continuing Higher Education, 2024
The purpose of this study is to understand the ways in which meditation practice can be used as an online pedagogical method based on adult learners' experiences with various forms of meditation practices. To arrive at this purpose, the researcher found it necessary to gather data about frequency of use, preferences, and related transformative…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Teaching Methods, Adult Learning, Biofeedback
Yuchen Liu; Stanislav Pozdniakov; Roberto Martinez-Maldonado – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2024
Learning analytics (LA) dashboards are becoming increasingly available in various learning settings. However, teachers may face challenges in understanding and interpreting the data visualisations presented on those dashboards. In response to this, some LA researchers are incorporating visual cueing techniques, like data storytelling (DS), into LA…
Descriptors: Visualization, Story Telling, Data Use, Cognitive Processes
Rodriguez-Falces, Javier – Advances in Physiology Education, 2015
A concept of major importance in human electrophysiology studies is the process by which activation of an excitable cell results in a rapid rise and fall of the electrical membrane potential, the so-called action potential. Hodgkin and Huxley proposed a model to explain the ionic mechanisms underlying the formation of action potentials. However,…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Scientific Methodology, Scientific Principles, Biofeedback

Holroyd, Kenneth A.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1984
Subjects (N=43) suffering from tension headache were assigned to one of four electromyograph (EMG) biofeedback conditions and were led to believe they were achieving high or moderate success in decreasing EMG activity. Regardless of actual EMG changes, subjects receiving high-success feedback showed greater improvement for headaches than…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Biofeedback, Cognitive Restructuring, College Students

See, John D.; Czerlinsky, Thomas – Journal of College Student Development, 1990
Examined use of biofeedback, relaxation training, or both in a college relaxation class with an enrollment of 33 students. Results indicated students receiving relaxation training plus biofeedback improved significantly more on psychological variables than did students receiving only relaxation training. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: Biofeedback, College Students, Higher Education, Psychological Characteristics

King, Theodore I., II – Occupational Therapy Journal of Research, 1992
Responses from 301 of 418 physical dysfunction clinics and 91 of 136 occupational therapy college programs found that 47 percent of clinics use biofeedback; 63 percent of professional-level and 13 percent of technical-level programs teach biofeedback; 73 percent of clinicians learned biofeedback on job; and 95 percent of clinics use…
Descriptors: Biofeedback, Clinics, Course Content, Higher Education

Prerost, Frank J.; Ruma, Christine – Psychology: A Quarterly Journal of Human Behavior, 1987
Tested 40 male and 40 female college students for level of relaxation and mood state following exposure to three types of humor content or a nonhumorous control. Humor appreciation was found to be effective in aiding relaxation while promoting positive affective mood state in subjects. Humor appreciation may be possible adjunct to biofeedback…
Descriptors: Biofeedback, College Students, Higher Education, Humor

Bohlken, Bob – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1994
Describe use of the galvanic skin response meter, in conjunction with class discussion, as an effective method for explaining the elusive concepts of "connotation" and "connotative value." (SR)
Descriptors: Biofeedback, Class Activities, Definitions, Discussion (Teaching Technique)

Hudesman, John; And Others – Psychology: A Quarterly Journal of Human Behavior, 1987
Studied program dealing with stress management for college health science students which included instruction in cognitive behavior modification, biofeedback, and open focus training. Results indicated students (N=43) using these techniques experienced less anxiety in a high pressure situation. Suggests lessening anxiety was related to an increase…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Biofeedback, Cognitive Restructuring, College Students

Hammond, Ralph B.; West, Ann J. – Teaching of Psychology, 1989
Describes a biofeedback technician training program which enabled the University of Arkansas (Little Rock) to solve problems concerning budget, dwindling resources, and the provision of clinical training experiences for students. Reports that, at both graduate and undergraduate levels, this program is cost effective, while providing career related…
Descriptors: Biofeedback, Budgeting, Educational Finance, Higher Education
Bohlken, Bob – 1995
The bare fact is that the speaker's words are nothing until the listener gives them meaning. The denotation of a word is developed through association with other words. The connotation is the more difficult concept to establish for the critical/comprehensive listener studying word meaning. The common explanation is that "connotation refers to…
Descriptors: Biofeedback, Class Activities, Classroom Communication, Higher Education

Prior, Daniel W.; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1983
Assessed the relative efficacy of EMG biofeedback training to reduce tension levels in students (N=55) characterized by the presence or absence of coronary-prone behavior pattern (Type A or Type B). Results showed biofeedback students attained and maintained greater relaxation during training than did controls, regardless of A/B status. (WAS)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Biofeedback, College Students, Counseling Effectiveness

Somerville, Addison W.; And Others – Teaching of Psychology, 1984
Graduate and undergraduate students showed a reduction in anxiety during a 16-week course designed to include information on the causes and effects of stress as well as practical techniques for stress management. A follow-up study showed that the students were still successfully using the stress management techniques a year later. (RM)
Descriptors: Biofeedback, Course Evaluation, Exercise, Higher Education

Balog, Linda Farrah – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1983
A study investigated effects of acute exercise: (1) on overall body relaxation, as measured by the reaction of the frontalis muscle; and (2) as an aid to biofeedback-induced relaxation. Exercise did not promote generalized relaxation in this study, nor did it affect the learning of biofeedback techniques. (Author/PP)
Descriptors: Bicycling, Biofeedback, College Students, Exercise
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