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Stevens, Ronald H. – Academic Medicine, 1991
Computer-based problem-solving examinations in immunology generate graphic representations of students' search paths, allowing evaluation of how organized and focused their knowledge is, how well their organization relates to critical concepts in immunology, where major misconceptions exist, and whether proper knowledge links exist between content…
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Computer Oriented Programs, Higher Education
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Rusconi, Elena; Kwan, Bonnie; Giordano, Bruno L.; Umilta, Carlo; Butterworth, Brian – Cognition, 2006
Through the preferential pairing of response positions to pitch, here we show that the internal representation of pitch height is spatial in nature and affects performance, especially in musically trained participants, when response alternatives are either vertically or horizontally aligned. The finding that our cognitive system maps pitch height…
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
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Schoeman, Sonja – South African Journal of Education, 2007
Despite enormous growth in the study of learners' cognitive processes, relatively little is known about how learners reason about social phenomena and issues involved in disciplines, such as history. Yet, according to scholars the process could hardly be more important, and it demands redress and scientific explanation. To contribute to the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, History Instruction, Etiology, Foreign Policy
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Rogers, Alan – Studies in the Education of Adults, 1993
The learning process may be described as personal maps of reality--the way in which individuals construct knowledge and how new experiences change the maps. When new material is encountered, learners place it somewhere on their maps; the teacher's role is to relocate it closer to the learner. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures
Riley, Mary S. – 1985
This document presents hypotheses about how much understanding a user needs to perform skillfully using a computer or a computer program. A framework for characterizing user understanding is presented which includes three criteria for evaluating the representation generated during problem solving: (1) internal coherence--whether the components of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Computers
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McInnis, Raymond G. – Reference Librarian, 1984
Discusses the concept of mental (or cognitive) maps--the images we construct in our minds to help us understand something--and argues that geographers' literature on mental maps can provide greater understanding of scientific literature's formats, conventions, processes, and formulations. Three classes of perception studies for mental maps are…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Citations (References), Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes
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Faber, Pamela – Language Awareness, 1998
Describes an exercise in lexical analysis, involving verbs of sound in English and Spanish. The aim of the exercise is to enable students to discover underlying patterns of meaning that are representative of lexical-conceptual structure. (Author/VL)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Dictionaries
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Waxman, Sandra R.; Klibanoff, Raquel S. – Developmental Psychology, 2000
Examined the role of the psychological process of comparison in young children's ability to extend a novel adjective to other objects sharing a salient property whether objects are of the same or different basic-level categories. Found that comparison operates in conjunction with naming to support extension of novel adjectives to properties of…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping
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Schweinle, Amy; Wilcox, Teresa – Infancy, 2004
Prior research suggests that when very simple event sequences are used, 4.5-month-olds demonstrate the ability to individuate objects based on the continuity or disruption of their speed of motion (Wilcox & Schweinle, 2003). However, infants demonstrate their ability to individuate objects in an event-monitoring task (i.e., infants must keep track…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Development, Neurological Organization, Cognitive Processes
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Larkey, Levi B.; Markman, Arthur B. – Cognitive Science, 2005
Similarity underlies fundamental cognitive capabilities such as memory, categorization, decision making, problem solving, and reasoning. Although recent approaches to similarity appreciate the structure of mental representations, they differ in the processes posited to operate over these representations. We present an experiment that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, Cognitive Mapping, Models
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Monaghan, Padraic; Shillcock, Richard – Psychological Review, 2004
Neglect is an acquired cognitive disorder characterized by a lack of processing of one side of a stimulus or representational space. There are hemispheric asymmetries in its cause and in its effects, but implemented computational models of neglect have tended not to incorporate this fact. The authors report a series of neural network simulations…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes
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Hertwig, Ralph; Pachur, Thorsten; Kurzenhauser, Stephanie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
How do people judge which of 2 risks claims more lives per year? The authors specified 4 candidate mechanisms and tested them against people's judgments in 3 risk environments. Two mechanisms, availability by recall and regressed frequency, conformed best to people's choices. The same mechanisms also accounted well for the mapping accuracy of…
Descriptors: Inferences, Information Processing, Incentives, Cognitive Processes
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Uttal, David H.; Fisher, Joan A.; Taylor, Holly A. – Developmental Science, 2006
People acquire spatial information from many sources, including maps, verbal descriptions, and navigating in the environment. The different sources present spatial information in different ways. For example, maps can show many spatial relations simultaneously, but in a description, each spatial relation must be presented sequentially. The present…
Descriptors: Maps, Concept Formation, Cognitive Mapping, Spatial Ability
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McDuffie, Andrea S.; Sindberg, Heidi A.; Hesketh, Linda J.; Chapman, Robin S. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2007
Purpose: The authors asked whether adolescents with Down syndrome (DS) could fast-map novel nouns and verbs when word learning depended on using the speaker's pragmatic or syntactic cues. Compared with typically developing (TD) comparison children, the authors predicted that syntactic cues would prove harder for the group with DS to use and that…
Descriptors: Cues, Verbs, Nouns, Syntax
Johnson, Bob L., Jr. – 1994
This paper presents findings of a study that explored how principals "enacted" and "structured" the environments of their schools. Weick's theoretical framework is used to understand the cognitive process by which managers selectively construct and attend to certain features of their environment while ignoring others. Data were obtained from…
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Administrator Role, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes
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