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Holl, Anna K.; Wilkinson, Leonora; Tabrizi, Sarah J.; Painold, Annamaria; Jahanshahi, Marjan – Neuropsychologia, 2012
In general, declarative learning is associated with the activation of the medial temporal lobes (MTL), while the basal ganglia (BG) are considered the substrate for procedural learning. More recently it has been demonstrated the distinction of these systems may not be as absolute as previously thought and that not only the explicit or implicit…
Descriptors: Evidence, Feedback (Response), Diseases, Patients
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Woods, Jeffrey G. – Learning Organization, 2012
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop a conceptual model that uses dialectical inquiry (DI) to create cognitive conflict in strategic decision-makers for the purpose of improving strategic decisions. Activation of the dialectical learning process using DI requires strategic decision-makers to integrate conflicting information causing…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Decision Making Skills, Conflict, Learning Processes
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Bauer, Patricia J.; King, Jessica E.; Larkina, Marina; Varga, Nicole L.; White, Elizabeth A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Children build up knowledge about the world and also remember individual episodes. How individual episodes during which children learn new things become integrated with one another to form general knowledge is only beginning to be explored. Integration between separate episodes is called on in educational contexts and in everyday life as a major…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Children, Research, Experiments
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Boucher, Jill; Mayes, Andrew; Bigham, Sally – Psychological Bulletin, 2012
Behavioral evidence concerning memory in forms of high-functioning autism (HFA) and in moderately low-functioning autism (M-LFA) is reviewed and compared. Findings on M-LFA are sparse. However, it is provisionally concluded that memory profiles in HFA and M-LFA (relative to ability-matched controls) are similar but that declarative memory…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Autism, Paired Associate Learning, Memory
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Hout, Michael C.; Goldinger, Stephen D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
When observers search for a target object, they incidentally learn the identities and locations of "background" objects in the same display. This learning can facilitate search performance, eliciting faster reaction times for repeated displays. Despite these findings, visual search has been successfully modeled using architectures that maintain no…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Incidental Learning, Search Strategies, Human Body
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Battro, Antonio M.; Fischer, Kurt W. – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2012
Computers are everywhere, and they are transforming the human world. The technology of computers and the Internet is radically changing the ways that people learn and communicate. In the midst of this technology-driven revolution people need to examine the changes to analyze how they are altering interaction and human culture. The changes have…
Descriptors: Conflict, Interaction, Longitudinal Studies, Internet
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Stefansson, Gunnar; Sigurdardottir, Asta Jenny – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2011
Exams have traditionally been given to evaluate students but in recent years, with the appearance of freely accessible on-line tutoring, quizzes can also be used as a learning tool. In systems where students can request quiz items until a satisfactory grade is obtained, new probabilistic approaches are required for dealing items to students and…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Rote Learning, Tests, Learning Experience
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Martin, Florence; Brooks, Robin Freeman; Gayford, Matthew C.; Hall, Herman A., IV; Whitfield, Kimberly Y. – Performance Improvement, 2011
This article describes the methods that were used to evaluate the "Blackboard Basics" and "Teaching in Blackboard" courses that are currently being offered by the Office of e-Learning at a southeastern university in the United States. This report includes a description of the background of this course, the purpose of the…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Integrated Learning Systems, Postsecondary Education, Electronic Learning
Oppenheim, Gary Michael – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Naming a picture of a dog primes the subsequent naming of a picture of a dog (repetition priming) and interferes with the subsequent naming of a picture of a cat (semantic interference). Behavioral studies suggest that these effects derive from persistent changes in the way that words are activated and selected for production, and some have…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Speech, Models, Naming
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Su, Ya-Hui – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2011
In an age of uncertainty, one of the aims of higher education is to establish lifelong learning abilities in students. However, different authors remain divided on the question of what constitutes "lifelong learning ability". This article proposes the hypothesis that the cultivation of lifelong learning abilities in higher education needs to be…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Lifelong Learning, Epistemology, Learning
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Peterson, Mary A. – Infancy, 2011
Bhatt and Quinn (2011) review the substantial evidence that learning constrains perceptual organization in infants. With those findings as a foundation, they discuss five kinds of experiences that engender learning in infants and propose that attention and unitization mediate infant learning. Bhatt and Quinn's article is informative--the ideas…
Descriptors: Infants, Learning, Visual Perception, Learning Experience
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Ugaste, Aino; Tuul, Maire; Niglas, Katrin; Neudorf, Evelyn – Early Child Development and Care, 2014
As in many Western countries, children's learning in the curriculum of Estonian Early Childhood Education is seen as a lifelong process, wherein the teacher is primarily a guide to children's active learning. Thus, a child-centred approach to learning is valued in the national curriculum, but our interest was whether this approach is fixed in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Preschool Children
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Sidorkin, Alexander M. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2011
Educational reforms in developed countries are not successful, because we do not have a clear understanding of what is education. The essence of education is the limits of its improvement. Education is understood as the artificial extension of human ability to learn, as the product of learner's own efforts, and finally, as a series of historic…
Descriptors: Education, Learning
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Carrillo, Edgardo Ruiz; González, José Luis Cruz; Martínez, Samuel Meraz; Sánchez, Luisa Bravo – International Education Studies, 2015
The purpose of this study is to analyze the discourse through IRE (Intervention-Response-Evaluation) in the co-construction of knowledge of Biology students during laboratory practices by applying the SDIS-GSEQ software to assess IRE discourse patterns developed during the same. The study group consisted of second semester students of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Biology, Undergraduate Students, Science Laboratories
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Middendorf, Joan; Mickute, Jolanta; Saunders, Tara; Najar, José; Clark-Huckstep, Andrew E.; Pace, David – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2015
The understandings and preconceptions students bring into the history classroom can interfere with student learning. Analyses of student and professor interviews in light of emotional bottlenecks revealed two different, though related, student preconceptions: procedural preconceptions about history as a field of study and pre-existing worldviews…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Psychological Patterns, Student Attitudes, World Views
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