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Conway, Andrew R. A.; Kovacs, Kristof; Hao, Han; Rosales, Kevin P.; Snijder, Jean-Paul – Journal of Intelligence, 2021
Process overlap theory (POT) is a new theoretical framework designed to account for the general factor of intelligence ("g"). According to POT, g does not reflect a general cognitive ability. Instead, "g" is the result of multiple domain-general executive attention processes and multiple domain-specific processes that are…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Attention, Intelligence, Executive Function
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Capuano, Nicola; Loia, Vincenzo; Orciuoli, Francesco – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2017
Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are becoming an increasingly popular choice for education but, to reach their full extent, they require the resolution of new issues like assessing students at scale. A feasible approach to tackle this problem is peer assessment, in which students also play the role of assessor for assignments submitted by…
Descriptors: Participative Decision Making, Models, Peer Evaluation, Online Courses
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Glockner, Andreas; Pachur, Thorsten – Cognition, 2012
In the behavioral sciences, a popular approach to describe and predict behavior is cognitive modeling with adjustable parameters (i.e., which can be fitted to data). Modeling with adjustable parameters allows, among other things, measuring differences between people. At the same time, parameter estimation also bears the risk of overfitting. Are…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Individual Differences, Behavioral Sciences, Cognitive Development
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Hofmans, Joeri – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2012
In the present paper, we (1) study whether people differ in the equity models they use, and (2) test whether individual differences in equity models relate to individual differences in equity sensitivity. To achieve this goal, an Information Integration experiment was performed in which participants were given information on the performance of two…
Descriptors: Models, Individual Differences, Experiments, Employees
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Tamez, Elaine; Myerson, Joel; Hale, Sandra – Intelligence, 2012
According to the cognitive cascade hypothesis, age-related slowing results in decreased working memory, which in turn affects higher-order cognition. Because recent studies show complex associative learning correlates highly with fluid intelligence, the present study examined the role of complex associative learning in cognitive cascade models of…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Associative Learning, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes
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Sheldon, Kennon M. – Psychological Review, 2011
Psychological need theories offer much explanatory potential for behavioral scientists, but there is considerable disagreement and confusion about what needs are and how they work. A 2-process model of psychological needs is outlined, viewing needs as evolved functional systems that provide both (a) innate psychosocial motives that tend to impel…
Descriptors: Psychological Needs, Adjustment (to Environment), Scientists, Models
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Sameroff, Arnold – Child Development, 2010
The understanding of nature and nurture within developmental science has evolved with alternating ascendance of one or the other as primary explanations for individual differences in life course trajectories of success or failure. A dialectical perspective emphasizing the interconnectedness of individual and context is suggested to interpret the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Individual Differences, Child Development, Models
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Wiers, Reinout W.; Stacy, Alan W. – Psychological Bulletin, 2010
Moss and Albery (2009) presented a dual-process model of the alcohol-behavior link, integrating alcohol expectancy and alcohol myopia theory. Their integrative theory rests on a number of assumptions including, first, that alcohol expectancies are associations that can be activated automatically by an alcohol-relevant context, and second, that…
Descriptors: Drinking, Individual Differences, Memory, Organizations (Groups)
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Sweitzer, Vicki Baker – Journal of Higher Education, 2009
This article proposes preliminary models for doctoral student professional identity development. It explores the question, What role do relationships play in doctoral students' professional identity development? In the first section, the author provides an overview of the prior research that informed this study with an emphasis on two previously…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Student Experience, Social Networks, Doctoral Programs
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Bouwmeester, Samantha; Vermunt, Jeroen K.; Sijtsma, Klaas – Developmental Review, 2007
Fuzzy trace theory explains why children do not have to use rules of logic or premise information to infer transitive relationships. Instead, memory of the premises and performance on transitivity tasks is explained by a verbatim ability and a gist ability. Until recently, the processes involved in transitive reasoning and memory of the premises…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Development, Classification, Individual Differences
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Bradley, Richard W. – Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 1994
Contends that tests were not used in counseling in the mid-20th century partially as a function of the prevailing view of what constituted science. Questions the 19th-century view of science regarding testing and then moves on to assert that the 21st-century application of tests with clients requires a substantial paradigm shift. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Counseling, Individual Differences, Models, Test Use
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Hogan, Joyce C.; Hogan, Robert – Child Development, 1975
Bruner's (1973) review of infant skill development is updated and extended by (a) placing it in the context of recent motor learning research; (b) discussing the concept of efference in its most recent conceptualization; and (c) explicating certain implicit themes relevant to a theory of infant motor intelligence. (ED)
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Infant Behavior, Models, Motor Development
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Morgan, Harry – Roeper Review, 1996
Howard Gardner's hypothesis of seven distinct types of intelligence is explained and each of the theorized intelligences is related to the theory of cognitive style. The article concludes that multiple intelligence theory is not about new "intelligences," but rather, a reframing of what others have defined as cognitive styles. (DB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Style, Individual Differences, Intelligence
Riegel, Klaus F. – 1973
Arguments for an extension of Piaget's theory of cognitive development have been derived from philosophical and historical considerations of modern natural science. Implicit contradictions, which characterize these sciences as well as common thought, can be systematically apprehended only through a dialectic reinterpretation. The dialectic basis…
Descriptors: Adults, Age, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology
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Cohen, Ronald L. – Intelligence, 1994
A case is made for the construction of nomothetic theories that can also explain individual differences. The discussion uses examples from the memory area and presents an approach to memory that explains individual findings and individual differences in the context of a single model. (SLD)
Descriptors: Encoding (Psychology), Individual Differences, Memory, Models
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