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Sarah E. Robertson; Jon A. Steingrimsson; Issa J. Dahabreh – Evaluation Review, 2024
When planning a cluster randomized trial, evaluators often have access to an enumerated cohort representing the target population of clusters. Practicalities of conducting the trial, such as the need to oversample clusters with certain characteristics in order to improve trial economy or support inferences about subgroups of clusters, may preclude…
Descriptors: Randomized Controlled Trials, Generalization, Inferences, Hierarchical Linear Modeling
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Moshe Poliak; Rachel Ryskin; Mika Braginsky; Edward Gibson – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Under the noisy-channel framework of language comprehension, comprehenders infer the speaker's intended meaning by integrating the perceived utterance with their knowledge of the language, the world, and the kinds of errors that can occur in communication. Previous research has shown that, when sentences are improbable under the meaning prior…
Descriptors: Russian, Ambiguity (Semantics), Sentence Structure, Inferences
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Gudrun Schwarzer; Bianca Jovanovic – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
The ability to predict upcoming events is essential in infancy because it enables babies to process information optimally and have successful goal-directed interactions with their environment. In this article, we examine how infants generate predictions in perception, cognition, and action, and address whether and how their predictions are…
Descriptors: Infants, Motor Development, Prediction, Cognitive Processes
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Stavroula Saplamidou; Charalampos Sakonidis – Statistics Education Research Journal, 2025
This paper reports on a study concerning the social nature of young students' informal inferential reasoning. Employing inferentialism as a background theory, we examine cognitive and sociocultural aspects of reasoning that arose during group discussions as well as trace relations between those aspects. Following a design experiment approach, we…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Grade 2, Cognitive Processes, Sociocultural Patterns
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Omar A. Naranjo; Steven R. Jones – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2024
Differential equations (DEs) are a powerful tool for modeling real-world contexts. Most research in this area has examined students' understanding and reasoning with pre-packaged DEs, with little attention being given to setting up sophisticated DEs to model complicated real-world situations. This study contributes through a collective case study…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Mathematical Models, Relevance (Education), Mathematics Skills
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Anne Patel; Maxine Pfannkuch – Statistics Education Research Journal, 2025
Statistics education researchers have been challenged to consider the theory of inferentialism in understanding concept formation in students. A critique of inferentialism is that no comprehensive method has been formulated to use the theory in practice. In this paper an inferentialism-based framework is presented that appears to be capable of…
Descriptors: Statistics, Middle School Mathematics, Inferences, Courseware
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Laura Jane Kelly; Sangeet Khemlani – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Descriptions of durational relations can be ambiguous, for example, the description "one meeting happened during another" could mean that one meeting started before the other ended, or it could mean that the meetings started and ended simultaneously. A recent theory posits that people mentally simulate descriptions of durational events…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Cognitive Processes, Simulation, Time Perspective
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Sylvia Pantaleo – Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, 2024
During a study in a Kindergarten classroom, wordless and almost wordless picturebooks were presented as aesthetic objects that are read for pleasure, reward slow looking, and require engagement in significant semiotic work. Instruction about and adult mediation of picturebooks throughout the research communicated to the children that elements of…
Descriptors: Young Children, Picture Books, Inferences, Kindergarten
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Thomas D. Griffin; Allison J. Jaeger; M. Anne Britt; Jennifer Wiley – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2024
Relying on multiple documents to answer questions is becoming common for both academic and personal inquiry tasks. These tasks often require students to explain phenomena by taking various causal factors that are mentioned separately in different documents and integrating them into a coherent multi-causal explanation of some phenomena. However,…
Descriptors: Documentation, Inquiry, Grade 8, Scientific Concepts
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Jose M. Pavía; Rafael Romero – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
The estimation of RxC ecological inference contingency tables from aggregate data is one of the most salient and challenging problems in the field of quantitative social sciences, with major solutions proposed from both the ecological regression and the mathematical programming frameworks. In recent decades, there has been a drive to find…
Descriptors: Elections, Voting, Social Science Research, Programming
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Soto, Alexis; Schoenlein, Melissa A.; Schloss, Karen B. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2023
In visual communication, people glean insights about patterns of data by observing visual representations of datasets. Colormap data visualizations ("colormaps") show patterns in datasets by mapping variations in color to variations in magnitude. When people interpret colormaps, they have expectations about how colors map to magnitude,…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Visualization, Data Interpretation, Expectation
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Aguirre, Marie; Brun, Mélanie; Morin, Olivier; Reboul, Anne; Mascaro, Olivier – Cognitive Science, 2023
Discovering the meaning of novel communicative cues is challenging and amounts to navigating an unbounded hypothesis space. Several theories posit that this problem can be simplified by relying on positive expectations about the cognitive utility of communicated information. These theories imply that learners should assume that novel communicative…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Cues, Expectation, Cognitive Processes
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Nan Xie; Zhengxu Li; Haipeng Lu; Wei Pang; Jiayin Song; Beier Lu – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2025
Classroom engagement is a critical factor for evaluating students' learning outcomes and teachers' instructional strategies. Traditional methods for detecting classroom engagement, such as coding and questionnaires, are often limited by delays, subjectivity, and external interference. While some neural network models have been proposed to detect…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Vaughan Prain; Russell Tytler – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Science educators now broadly recognize the multimodal nature of learning in science, where learners make meanings within modes (linguistic, mathematical, visual, and actional) by using the conventions of different sign systems or grammars in these modes. However, how teachers guide students to link and infer new meanings across modes, called…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science, Astronomy, Science Activities
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Benjamin R. Shear; Derek C. Briggs – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2024
Research in the social and behavioral sciences relies on a wide range of experimental and quasi-experimental designs to estimate the causal effects of specific programs, policies, and events. In this paper we highlight measurement issues relevant to evaluating the validity of causal estimation and generalization. These issues impact all four…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Inferences, COVID-19, Pandemics
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