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Dunford, Christine Mary; Yoshizaki-Gibbons, Hailee M.; Morhardt, Darby – Research in Drama Education, 2017
There is a recognised need for research that illuminates mutually beneficial connections among performance, ageing, disability theory, and praxis. One such project is the Memory Ensemble™, an improvisational theatre intervention for persons with early stage Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). This case study explores how the…
Descriptors: Dementia, Aging (Individuals), Memory, Cognitive Ability
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Faber, Myrthe; Gennari, Silvia P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
The field of psychology of time has typically distinguished between prospective timing and retrospective duration estimation: in prospective timing, participants attend to and encode time, whereas in retrospective estimation, estimates are based on the memory of what happened. Prior research on prospective timing has primarily focused on…
Descriptors: Memory, Psychology, Statistical Analysis, Time Management
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Er, Erkan; Kim, ChanMin – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2017
Teachers' episodic memories influence their beliefs. The investigation of episodic memories can help identify the teacher beliefs that limit technology-integration. We propose the Episode-Centered Belief Change (ECBC) model that utilizes teachers' episodic memories for changing beliefs impeding effective technology integration. We also propose…
Descriptors: Memory, Beliefs, Faculty Development, Attitude Change
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Selmeczy, Diana; Dobbins, Ian G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
Recognition judgments can benefit from the use of environmental cues that signal the general likelihood of encountering familiar versus unfamiliar stimuli. While incorporating such cues is often adaptive, there are circumstances (e.g., eyewitness testimony) in which observers should fully ignore environmental cues in order to preserve memory…
Descriptors: Memory, Cues, Familiarity, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Schindler, Julia; Richter, Tobias; Eyßer, Carolin – Frontline Learning Research, 2017
Generating information, compared to reading, improves learning and enhances long-term retention of the learned content. This so-called generation effect has been demonstrated repeatedly for recall and recognition of single words. However, before adopting generating as a learning strategy in educational contexts, conditions moderating the effect…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Undergraduate Students, Foreign Countries, Predictor Variables
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Castela, Marta; Erdfelder, Edgar – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
The recognition heuristic (RH) theory predicts that, in comparative judgment tasks, if one object is recognized and the other is not, the recognized one is chosen. The memory-state heuristic (MSH) extends the RH by assuming that choices are not affected by recognition judgments per se, but by the memory states underlying these judgments (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Memory, Heuristics, Recognition (Psychology), Hypothesis Testing
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Geva, Esther; Galili, Kama; Katzir, Tami; Shany, Michal – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2017
This study examined the ability to infer the meaning of novel made-up words that appeared in 16 short narrative texts, presented in two modalities--reading and listening. Hebrew-speaking 4th grade students (N = 54) were asked to infer the meanings of the made-up words in both modality conditions. In this cross-group design, students were randomly…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Semitic Languages, Reading Comprehension, Listening Comprehension
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Rollins, Leslie; Riggins, Tracy – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2017
This longitudinal study examined developmental changes in conflict inhibition and error correction in three cohorts of children (5, 7, and 9 years of age). At each point of assessment, children completed three levels of Luria's tapping task (1980), which requires the inhibition of a dominant response and maintenance of task rules in working…
Descriptors: Conflict, Inhibition, Longitudinal Studies, Cohort Analysis
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Jarodzka, Halszka; Boshuizen, Henny P. . – Frontline Learning Research, 2017
Visual expertise in medicine has been a subject of research since many decades. Interestingly, it has been investigated from two little related fields, namely the field that focused mainly on the visual search aspects whilst ignoring higher-level cognitive processes involved in medical expertise, and the field that mainly focused on these…
Descriptors: Medicine, Expertise, Cognitive Processes, Vision
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Janczyk, Markus – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
Successful completion of any cognitive task requires selecting a particular action and the object the action is applied to. Oberauer (2009) suggested a working memory (WM) model comprising a declarative and a procedural part with analogous structures. One important assumption of this model is that both parts work independently of each other, and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Short Term Memory, Adolescents, Young Adults
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Kilfoil, Carrie Byars – Composition Studies, 2017
This article analyzes the decline of linguistics in rhetoric and composition PhD programs in terms of the "linguistic memory" (Trimbur) of composition. Since the field of linguistics once offered the primary means for composition to address the structural, psychological, sociohistorical, and cultural dimensions of language in student…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Study, Graduate Students, Linguistics
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Hultberg, Patrik T.; Calonge, David Santandreu – Journal of Economic Education, 2017
One of the fundamental tenets of economics is that decisions are often the result of optimization problems subject to resource constraints. Consumers optimize utility, subject to constraints imposed by prices and income. As economics faculty, instructors attempt to maximize student learning while being constrained by their own and students'…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Economics Education, Economics, Instructional Effectiveness
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Grainger, Catherine; Williams, David M.; Lind, Sophie E. – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2017
It is well established that neurotypical individuals generally show better memory for actions they have performed than actions they have observed others perform or merely read about, a so-called "enactment effect." Strikingly, research has also shown that neurotypical individuals demonstrate superior memory for actions they…
Descriptors: Memory, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Autism, Asperger Syndrome
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Sheehan, Mark; Davison, Martyn – London Review of Education, 2017
This article examines the extent to which young people in New Zealand share the dominant beliefs and assumptions that inform contemporary notions of war remembrance concerning the First World War. In particular, it considers how they make meaning of the ANZAC/Gallipoli narrative. Informed by two empirical studies, it questions whether young people…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Beliefs, Attitudes
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Mann, Trisha D.; Hund, Alycia M.; Hesson-McInnis, Matthew S.; Roman, Zachary J. – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2017
The current study specified the extent to which hot and cool aspects of executive functioning predicted academic and social-emotional indicators of school readiness. It was unique in focusing on positive aspects of social-emotional readiness, rather than problem behaviors. One hundred four 3-5-year-old children completed tasks measuring executive…
Descriptors: Executive Function, School Readiness, Social Development, Emotional Development
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