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Peel, E. A. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1975
This study reports the development of a sentence preference test designed to contrast tendencies to abstract, generalise and particularise in thinking. (Editor)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Age, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
DeFazio, Victor J.; Moroney, William F. – J Psychol, 1969
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Cognitive Processes, Perception Tests, Sensory Experience
Pask, Gordon – 1971
A series of pilot experiments were carried out to investigate the influence of stress induced by load and interference on the acquisition and retention of a path finding skill, and to investigate the relationship between two path finding strategies--retention of strings of instructions and understanding of global relationships--as components of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Assisted Instruction, Flight Training, Generalization
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Campione, Joseph C.; Brown, Ann L. – Intelligence, 1978
Research on educable retarded children is reviewed to explicate components of and a theory of intelligence. Studies of control processes in memory and problem solving indicate that the ability to generalize is a major component of intelligence. Research on individual differences in components of information processing systems are also discussed.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Individual Differences, Intelligence
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Merriman, William E. – Child Development, 1986
Evaluates some possible reasons for the occurrence and eventual correction of children's naming errors in an experiment in which two-, four-, and six-year-olds learned two artificial object names in succession. (HOD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Classification, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
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Beamer, James E.; Fejfar, James L. – School Science and Mathematics, 1974
Imagine a wooden cube painted and cut into "unit cubes." A typical activity consists of predicting the number of unit cubes with exactly three faces painted, two faces painted, etc. This article presents extensions of this activity designed to help students develop analyzing abilities and powers to generalize. (JP)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Mathematics, Experiential Learning, Generalization
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O'Hare, Michael; Hogan, John D. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1983
Seventy mentally retarded students, successfully taught to conserve number and substance in the Piagetian sense, resisted attempts at extinction but were unable to generalize to other conservation tasks. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Cognitive Processes, Conservation (Concept), Elementary Secondary Education
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Pietromonaco, Paula R.; Nisbett, Richard E. – Social Behavior and Personality, 1982
Examined whether reading the Darley and Batson study served to change subjects' understanding of the determinants of helping, and if subjects would come to regard degree of hurry as an important predictor in similar helping situations. Found subjects predicting helping behavior in similar situations were influenced moderately by hurry. (RC)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Beliefs, Cognitive Processes, College Students
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Bray, Norman W.; And Others – Intelligence, 1982
The influence of task explanation on strategy transfer was studied. When educable mentally retarded adolescents were trained to rehearse and given a minimal explanation of a directed forgetting task, the majority were found to maintain the strategy on trials identical to rehearsal, but they failed to generalize the strategy in other trials.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Mental Retardation
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Rabinowitz, F. Michael – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Kindergarten and first grade children were trained to choose the middle-sized stimulus in either a single stimulus set or in each of two nonoverlapping stimulus sets. Findings were reported in terms of the assumption that cognitive processes are important in the intermediate-sized transposition paradigm. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Collet-Klingenberg, Lana; Chadsey-Rusch, Janis – Education and Training in Mental Retardation, 1991
The effectiveness of a cognitive-process approach for teaching appropriate responses to criticism were assessed across three young adults with moderate mental retardation who were receiving vocational training. Results indicated that two participants learned this approach and successfully generalized their behavior across untrained stimuli.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Skills, Generalization, Interpersonal Relationship
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Maddox, W. Todd; Filoteo, J. Vincent; Lauritzen, J. Scott; Connally, Emily; Hejl, Kelli D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Three experiments were conducted that provide a direct examination of within-category discontinuity manipulations on the implicit, procedural-based learning and the explicit, hypothesis-testing systems proposed in F. G. Ashby, L. A. Alfonso-Reese, A. U. Turken, and E. M. Waldron's (1998) competition between verbal and implicit systems model.…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Cognitive Processes, Learning Processes, Hypothesis Testing
Valett, Robert E. – 1986
This document was written for junior and senior high school students to help them learn to cope more effectively with their problems. It is intended as a quide for helping adolescents explore and solve problems through constructive critical thinking. Ten steps in the process of constructive critical thinking are presented with personal and social…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cognitive Processes, Coping, Critical Thinking
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Kuczaj, Stan A., II – Journal of Child Language, 1978
The progressive inflection "-ing" appears to be the earliest verb inflection acquired by children learning English as their first language. Explanations are made on why the progressive is rarely, if ever, overgeneralized to inappropriate forms. (SW)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Generalization
Esteley, Cristina; Villarreal, Monica; Alagia, Humberto – International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2004
This research report presents a study of the work of agronomy majors in which an extension of linear models to non-linear contexts can be observed. By linear models we mean the model y=a.x+b, some particular representations of direct proportionality and the diagram for the rule of three. Its presence and persistence in different types of problems…
Descriptors: Agronomy, College Students, Foreign Countries, Mathematical Concepts
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