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Seah, Ying Ying; Magana, Alejandra J. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2019
Experimentation is one of the important strategies used in engineering design to understand the relationship between relevant variables so that they can be manipulated to generate optimized solution for a particular problem or design. The understanding of students' experimentation strategies allows educators to help students improve their design…
Descriptors: Science Education, Experiments, Engineering Education, Computer Assisted Design
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Dillon, Brian; Andrews, Caroline; Rotello, Caren M.; Wagers, Matthew – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2019
One perennially important question for theories of sentence comprehension is whether the human sentence processing mechanism is "parallel" (i.e., it simultaneously represents multiple syntactic analyses of linguistic input) or "serial" (i.e., it constructs only a single analysis at a time). Despite its centrality, this question…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Comprehension, Sentence Structure, Reading Comprehension
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Ruba, Ashley L.; Meltzoff, Andrew N.; Repacholi, Betty M. – Developmental Psychology, 2019
There is extensive disagreement as to whether preverbal infants have conceptual categories for different emotions (e.g., anger vs. disgust). In addition, few studies have examined whether infants have conceptual categories of emotions "within" the same dimension of valence and arousal (e.g., high arousal, negative emotions). The current…
Descriptors: Infants, Psychological Patterns, Negative Attitudes, Emotional Response
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Earles, Julie L.; Kersten, Alan W. – Cognitive Science, 2017
Three experiments test the theory that verb meanings are more malleable than noun meanings in different semantic contexts, making a previously seen verb difficult to remember when it appears in a new semantic context. Experiment 1 revealed that changing the direct object noun in a transitive sentence reduced recognition of a previously seen verb,…
Descriptors: Verbs, Nouns, Semantics, Memory
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Scontras, Gregory; Badecker, William; Fedorenko, Evelina – Cognitive Science, 2017
In our article, "Syntactic complexity effects in sentence production" [Scontras, Badecker, Shank, Lim, & Fedorenko, 2015 (EJ1057757)], we reported two elicited production experiments and argued that there is a cost associated with planning and uttering syntactically complex, object-extracted structures that contain a non-local…
Descriptors: Syntax, Sentences, Experiments, Planning
Vetrovec, Logan; Massey, Anne; Santen, Sally A.; Edwards, Cherie; Kreutzer, Kathleen O'Kane; Harris, Kevin – Metropolitan Universities, 2022
Academic health centers (AHC) both contribute to and are influenced by the communities they serve. As part of a central commitment to improving human health, there is a need for AHCs to acknowledge their history related to race and racism, the resulting impact on current health disparities, and the disparate treatment of racial and minoritized…
Descriptors: Health Services, Medical Services, Medical Schools, Clinics
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Fiacconi, Chris M.; Mitton, Evan E.; Laursen, Skylar J.; Skinner, Jasmyn – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
Judgments of learning (JOLs) refer to explicit predictions regarding the likelihood of remembering newly acquired information on a later test of memory. In recent years, there has been considerable interest in understanding the processes that underlie such judgments. Recent theorizing on this matter has characterized JOLs as inferential in…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Memory, Tests, Cues
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Lehikko, Anu – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2021
To further the study of learning in the context of immersive virtual technologies, this systematic literature review addressed the following research questions: 'How is self-efficacy being studied in immersive virtual learning environments?' 'What kinds of self-efficacy findings have been made in immersive virtual learning environments?' The…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Computer Simulation, Virtual Classrooms, Educational Research
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Devadrita Talapatra; Laurel A. Snider; Kayla McCreadie; Eileen Cullen – School Psychology International, 2024
People with intellectual disabilities (IDs) have experienced involuntary and inhumane research practices. Consequently, researchers have shifted towards "excluding" those with IDs; caregivers, teachers, or peers compose study samples, dominating a space they "indirectly" experience. Researcher bias regarding intellectual…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, School Psychology, Students with Disabilities, Student Empowerment
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MacLean, Carla L.; Coburn, Patricia I.; Chong, Kristin; Connolly, Deborah L. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
Witnesses to industrial incidents may be asked to recall a single instance of a familiar event. This research systematically tested if deviations to what typically occurs and postevent information (PEI) enhanced reporting of an instance of a repeated event. Across 2 experiments, each participant experienced 5 food-tasting instances; these…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Occupational Safety and Health, Repetition
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Rákosi, Csilla – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2018
This paper proposes the use of the tools of statistical meta-analysis as a method of conflict resolution with respect to experiments in cognitive linguistics. With the help of statistical meta-analysis, the effect size of similar experiments can be compared, a well-founded and robust synthesis of the experimental data can be achieved, and possible…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Meta Analysis, Experiments, Statistical Analysis
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Craycraft, Nicole N.; Brown-Schmidt, Sarah – Cognitive Science, 2018
The common ground that conversational partners share is thought to form the basic context for language use. According to the classic view, inferences about common ground, or mutual knowledge, are guided by beliefs about the physical, cognitive, and attentional states of one's communicative partners. Here, we provide a first test of the…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Attention, Social Cognition, Audience Awareness
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Negley, Jacob H.; Kelley, Colleen M.; Jacoby, Larry L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
Change has been described as detrimental for later memory for the original event in research on retroactive interference. Popular accounts of retroactive interference treat learning as the formation of simple associations and explain interference as due to response competition, perhaps along with unlearning or inhibition of the original response.…
Descriptors: Interference (Learning), Memory, Undergraduate Students, Time on Task
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Yu, Lili; Xiong, Jianping; Zhang, Qiaoming; Drieghe, Denis; Reichle, Erik D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2019
Although strokes are the smallest identifiable units in Chinese words, the fact that they are often embedded within larger units (i.e., radicals and/or characters that comprise Chinese words) raises questions about "how" and even "if" strokes are separately represented in lexical memory. The present experiment examined these…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Chinese, Reading, Memory
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Mitra, Sugata – Journal of Learning for Development, 2019
This paper examines the effect of the Internet on the reading comprehension of children reading together in groups. First, we describe an experiment to determine if children reading together off the Internet from big screens, can read at a higher comprehension level than children reading the same text alone. The results from this small-sample…
Descriptors: Internet, Reading Comprehension, Children, Foreign Countries
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