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Showing 541 to 555 of 692 results Save | Export
Bonnema, Ted R. – Online Submission, 2009
This paper discusses brain-based learning and its relation to classroom instruction. A rapidly growing quantity of research currently exists regarding how the brain perceives, processes, and ultimately learns new information. In order to maximize their teaching efficacy, educators should have a basic understanding of key memory functions in the…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Learning Processes, Brain, Educational Research
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Bollet, Robert M.; Fallon, Santiago – Educational Media International, 2002
Discussion of the concepts of learning and training focuses on how to incorporate the whole brain in the learning process when personalizing electronic learning. Suggests that trainers will need to learn teaching strategies that embrace the right brain's need for time and space to examine, contemplate, integrate, and utilize information.…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Individualized Instruction, Information Utilization, Learning Processes
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Marshall, Stephanie Pace – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
Because continuous learning and knowledge generation are core competencies in our ability to resolve the problems facing us as a world community, we must reject the efficiency model and embrace the emerging model of learning. Current schooling structures are counter to new brain/mind learning precepts. Learner-as-pioneer requires individuals to…
Descriptors: Brain, Experiments, Futures (of Society), Learning Processes
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D'Arcangelo, Marcia – Educational Leadership, 2000
Neuropsychology professor Steven Petersen describes what scientists are finding out about brain development, synaptic growth and wiring, intentional and incidental learning, the role of emotion in learning, and declarative and implicit memory systems. Neuroscience has only the broadest outline of principles to offer today's educators. (MLH)
Descriptors: Brain, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education
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Frith, Uta – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2005
The brain has evolved to educate and to be educated, often instinctively and effortlessly. The brain is the machine that allows all forms of learning to take place--from baby squirrels learning how to crack nuts, birds learning to fly, children learning to ride a bike and memorising times-tables to adults learning a new language or mastering how…
Descriptors: Brain, Educational Trends, Futures (of Society), Neuropsychology
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White, Norman M.; Gaskin, Stephane – Learning & Memory, 2006
Learning to discriminate between spatial locations defined by two adjacent arms of a radial maze in the conditioned cue preference paradigm requires two kinds of information: latent spatial learning when the rats explore the maze with no food available, and learning about food availability in two spatial locations when the rats are then confined…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Memory, Discrimination Learning, Spatial Ability
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Sakata, Kazuko; Akbarian, Schahram; Bates, Brian; Jaenisch, Rudolf; Lu, Bai; Shimazu, Kazuhiro; Zhao, Mingrui – Learning & Memory, 2006
In the adult brain, the expression of NT-3 is largely confined to the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG), an area exhibiting significant neurogenesis. Using a conditional mutant line in which the "NT-3" gene is deleted in the brain, we investigated the role of NT-3 in adult neurogenesis, hippocampal plasticity, and memory. Bromodeoxyuridine…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Brain, Molecular Structure, Animals
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Hugues, Sandrine; Deschaux, Olivier; Garcia, Rene – Learning & Memory, 2004
We investigated whether postextinction training infusion of PD098059, a selective inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation, into the medial prefrontal cortex, would impair retention of extinction learning in rats. We found that immediate, but not late (2 or 4 h), postextinction infusion of PD098059 provoked a full return of…
Descriptors: Brain, Memory, Fear, Conditioning
Melton, Louisa; Pickett, Winston; Sherer, Gail – 1999
This booklet examines the learning process in reading, not with an eye to simple solutions, but with concern about problems and potential remedies. Within this framework, it discusses research on the brain and learning processes and suggests some ways to improve instruction for all children in grades K-8. After an introduction, sections of the…
Descriptors: Brain, Early Reading, Elementary Education, Learning Processes
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Wilsher, Colin R. – Annals of Dyslexia, 1986
Studies with Nootropic psychoactive drugs (such as Piracetam) suggest that Piracetam lacks significant side effects; promotes memory and learning; and improves the reading ability of dyslexics, possibly by directly affecting the left-brain hemisphere. Results are contrasted with studies showing the lack of effectiveness of intensive teaching.…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Drug Therapy, Dyslexia, Learning Processes
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Sims, Ronald R. – Public Personnel Management, 1993
Kolb's Experiential Learning Model suggests that people differ in how they perceive and process information. Public agency training should incorporate knowledge of brain hemisphere dominance and learning style preferences in training design. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Style, Experiential Learning
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D'Arcangelo, Marcia – Educational Leadership, 1998
Interviews with five neuroscientists--Martin Diamond, Pat Wolfe, Robert Sylwester, Geoffrey Caine, and Eric Jensen--disclose brain-research findings of practical interest to educators. Topics include brain physiology, environmental enrichment, memorization, windows of learning opportunity, brain learning capacity, attention span, student interest,…
Descriptors: Attention Span, Brain, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrichment
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Happaney, Keith; Zelazo, Philip David – Brain and Cognition, 2004
Extinction of operantly conditioned responses, which provides a measure of the ability to adapt to changes in the reinforcement value of stimuli, has been linked to orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) in human and non-human animals. This article examines the feasibility of using extinction as a measure of the development of OFC function in preschool-age…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Operant Conditioning, Stimuli, Learning Processes
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Yuan, Qi; Mutoh, Hiroki; Debarbieux, Franck; Knopfel, Thomas – Learning & Memory, 2004
Synapses formed by the olfactory nerve (ON) provide the source of excitatory synaptic input onto mitral cells (MC) in the olfactory bulb. These synapses, which relay odor-specific inputs, are confined to the distally tufted single primary dendrites of MCs, the first stage of central olfactory processing. Beta-adrenergic modulation of electrical…
Descriptors: Animals, Biology, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Biochemistry
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Fister, Mathew; Bickford, Paula C.; Cartford, M. Claire; Samec, Amy – Learning & Memory, 2004
The neurotransmitter norepinephrine (NE) has been shown to modulate cerebellar-dependent learning and memory. Lesions of the nucleus locus coeruleus or systemic blockade of noradrenergic receptors has been shown to delay the acquisition of several cerebellar-dependent learning tasks. To date, no studies have shown a direct involvement of…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Classical Conditioning, Learning Processes, Biochemistry
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