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Showing 1 to 15 of 77 results Save | Export
Ethan Roy – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The human brain's ability to adapt and change in response to environmental inputs drives nearly all forms of learning throughout the lifespan. The unique plasticity of the human brain allows for the uptake of sociocultural inventions, such as reading and mathematics, through widespread changes across a range of cortical areas and white matter…
Descriptors: Brain, Educational Environment, Environmental Influences, Individual Development
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Brancamp, Tami U. – Topics in Language Disorders, 2023
The purpose of this original essay is to describe the process of developing a stakeholder-engaged research (SER) team with people who have aphasia. The SER process is described through the lens of posttraumatic growth and depreciation in aphasia. This article describes the process of modifying the Posttraumatic Growth and Depreciation Inventory…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Trauma, Individual Development, Stakeholders
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Bhattacharyya, Anita – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2020
Our bodies are made up of over 250 specific cell types, and all initially arise from stem cells during embryonic development. Stem cells have two characteristics that make them unique: (1) they are pluripotent, meaning that they can differentiate into all cell types of the body, and (2) they are capable of self-renewal to generate more of…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Brain, Individual Development, Intellectual Disability
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Testolin, Alberto; Zou, Will Y.; McClelland, James L. – Developmental Science, 2020
Both humans and non-human animals exhibit sensitivity to the approximate number of items in a visual array, as indexed by their performance in numerosity discrimination tasks, and even neonates can detect changes in numerosity. These findings are often interpreted as evidence for an innate 'number sense'. However, recent simulation work has…
Descriptors: Numbers, Brain, Individual Development, Age Differences
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Bathelt, Joe; Geurts, Hilde M. – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2021
Differences in the default mode network are among the most replicated brain-level findings in autistic individuals. Furthermore, subregions within the default mode network are associated with cognitive functions such as mentalising that are immediately relevant to cognitive theories of autism. Recent evidence suggests that the default mode network…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Brain, Children
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Bessières, Benjamin; Jia, Margaret; Travaglia, Alessio; Alberini, Cristina M. – Learning & Memory, 2019
The basolateral complex of amygdala (BLA) processes emotionally arousing aversive and rewarding experiences. The BLA is critical for acquisition and storage of threat-based memories and the modulation of the consolidation of arousing explicit memories, that is, the memories that are encoded and stored by the medial temporal lobe. In addition, in…
Descriptors: Brain, Animals, Memory, Individual Development
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Gard, Arianna M.; Maxwell, Andrea M.; Shaw, Daniel S.; Mitchell, Colter; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne; McLanahan, Sara S.; Forbes, Erika E.; Monk, Christopher S.; Hyde, Luke W. – Developmental Science, 2021
A growing literature suggests that adversity is associated with later altered brain function, particularly within the corticolimbic system that supports emotion processing and salience detection (e.g., amygdala, prefrontal cortex [PFC]). Although neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage has been shown to predict maladaptive behavioral outcomes,…
Descriptors: Brain, Disadvantaged Environment, Neighborhoods, Individual Development
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Volkova, Polina; Luginina, Anna; Saenko, Natalya; Samusenkov, Vadim – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2020
The article is devoted to the study of the dual nature of virtuality as a sociocultural phenomenon, which enables the outlining of recommendations for ensuring the integrity of a holistic personality and its stability in a world subject to transformation. The study is based on the methodology of systemic and structural research; comparative…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Biology, Information Systems, Individual Development
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Capone, George T. – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2020
Translational research means different things to different people. In the biomedical research community, translational research is the process of applying knowledge from basic biology and clinical trials to techniques and tools that address critical medical needs such as new therapies. Translational research then is a "bench to bedside"…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Research, Genetic Disorders, Physiology
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Schwartz, Flora; Zhang, Yuan; Chang, Hyesang; Karraker, Shelby; Kang, Julia Boram; Menon, Vinod – Developmental Science, 2021
Mathematical knowledge is constructed hierarchically from basic understanding of quantities and the symbols that denote them. Discrimination of numerical quantity in both symbolic and non-symbolic formats has been linked to mathematical problem-solving abilities. However, little is known of the extent to which overlap in quantity representations…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Mathematics Skills, Elementary School Students, Young Adults
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Jenny van Dongen; Marc Jan Bonder; Koen F. Dekkers; Michel G. Nivard; Maarten van Iterson; Gonneke Willemsen; Marian Beekman; Ashley van der Spek; Joyce B. J. van Meurs; Lude Franke; Bastiaan T. Heijmans; Cornelia M. van Duijn; P. Eline Slagboom; Dorret I. Boomsma; BIOS Consortium – npj Science of Learning, 2018
Educational attainment is a key behavioural measure in studies of cognitive and physical health, and socioeconomic status. We measured DNA methylation at 410,746 CpGs (N = 4152) and identified 58 CpGs associated with educational attainment at loci characterized by pleiotropic functions shared with neuronal, immune and developmental processes.…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Genetics, Smoking, Brain
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Gotlieb, Rebecca J. M.; Immordino-Yang, Mary Helen; Gonzalez, Emily; Rhinehart, Laura; Mahjouri, Saara; Pueschel, Ellyn; Nadaya, Gina – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2022
Current conversations in literacy research call for the need to consider children's social-emotional development and academic learning in an integrated way that honors and supports the whole child in their cultural context. Here we review available literatures on the cognitive, linguistic, affective, social and cultural dimensions of typical and…
Descriptors: Youth, Student Diversity, Minority Group Students, Social Emotional Learning
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Prigge, Molly B. D.; Bigler, Erin D.; Travers, Brittany G.; Froehlich, Alyson; Abildskov, Tracy; Anderson, Jeffrey S.; Alexander, Andrew L.; Lange, Nicholas; Lainhart, Janet E.; Zielinski, Brandon A. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2018
The relationship between brain development and clinical heterogeneity in autism (ASD) is unknown. This study examines the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS) in relation to the longitudinal development of cortical thickness. Participants (N = 91 ASD, N = 56 TDC; 3-39 years at first scan) were scanned up to three times over a 7-year period.…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Brain, Measures (Individuals)
Gross, Karen – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2020
The contents of this article and the examples given and lessons proffered boil down to this: the need to ramp up positive role modeling. Role modeling isn't a part-time activity. It is a full-time obligation. To that end, parents and educators: (1) need to come up with strategies in advance that recognize that young people need ways to engage…
Descriptors: Role Models, COVID-19, Pandemics, Student Behavior
Heller, Rafael – Phi Delta Kappan, 2019
Kappan's editor talks with Tracey Tokuhama-Espinosa, a leader in the international movement to translate findings from neuroscience into usable knowledge for educators. Topics include neuromyths (common, but erroneous, beliefs about how the brain works), the current scientific consensus about how people learn, and the contributions that the…
Descriptors: Brain, Neurosciences, Misconceptions, Learning Processes
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