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Griffith, Frances J.; Bauer-Leffler, Simon – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2018
The recovery-oriented approach to psychiatric care encourages decision making between patients and providers. However, one barrier to patients' involvement in their own treatment planning is the lack of meaningful communication with providers. Healthy Mind Messages, a collaborative art installation created by patients and staff at the Oregon State…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Psychiatric Hospitals, Decision Making, Patients
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Hill, Cynthia F. C.; Gouvea, Julia S.; Hammer, David – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2018
Instructors communicate what they value about students' written work through their comments and feedback, and this feedback has the potential to direct how students approach writing assignments. In this study, we examined how graduate student teaching assistants (TAs) attended and responded to students' written lab reports in an introductory…
Descriptors: Teaching Assistants, Attention, Logical Thinking, Graduate Students
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Nelson, James Byron; Fabiano, Andrew M.; Lamoureux, Jeffrey A. – Learning & Memory, 2018
Two experiments assessed the effects of extinguishing a conditioned cue on subsequent context conditioning. Each experiment used a different video-game method where sensors predicted attacking spaceships and participants responded to the sensor in a way that prepared them for the upcoming attack. In Experiment 1 extinction of a cue which signaled…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Arousal Patterns, Attention, Context Effect
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Zhou, Wei; Shu, Hua; Miller, Kevin; Yan, Ming – Journal of Research in Reading, 2018
Background: Disruptions of reading processes due to text substitutions can measure how readers use lexical information. Methods: With eye-movement recording, children and adults viewed sentences with either identical, orthographically similar, homophonic or unrelated substitutions of the first characters in target words. To the extent that readers…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Phonology, Orthographic Symbols
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Miller, Christi W.; Bernstein, Joshua G. W.; Zhang, Xuyang; Wu, Yu-Hsiang; Bentler, Ruth A.; Trembley, Kelly – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2018
Purpose: This study evaluated whether certain spectral ripple conditions were more informative than others in predicting ecologically relevant unaided and aided speech outcomes. Method: A quasi-experimental study design was used to evaluate 67 older adult hearing aid users with bilateral, symmetrical hearing loss. Speech perception in noise was…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Auditory Perception, Predictor Variables, Speech Communication
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Logan, Kayla; Mountain, Lee – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
This 12-month qualitative study examined the efforts and classroom practices of a team of chemistry teachers in a high-needs secondary (9-12) school as they worked toward meeting a campus mandate to incorporate student writing into their curriculum. The researcher, an English teacher and peer, investigated how this team of teachers negotiated…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Secondary School Science, Chemistry, Scoring Rubrics
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Vendeville, Nathalie; Blanc, Nathalie; Brechet, Claire – Educational Psychology, 2018
Up to now, very few studies investigated the influence of gender on the depiction of emotions in children's drawings. However, the literature on emotions reveals differences between boys and girls in various kinds of tasks (e.g. recognising emotional facial expressions, understanding an emotional situation, etc.). Therefore, we examined the impact…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Psychological Patterns, Freehand Drawing, Nonverbal Communication
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Starns, Jeffrey J.; Ma, Qiuli – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
The two-high-threshold (2HT) model of recognition memory assumes that people make memory errors because they fail to retrieve information from memory and make a guess, whereas the continuous unequal-variance (UV) model and the low-threshold (LT) model assume that people make memory errors because they retrieve misleading information from memory.…
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Recognition (Psychology), Memory, Tests
Kiewra, Kenneth A.; Colliot, Tiphaine; Lu, Junrong – IDEA Center, Inc., 2018
Students are incomplete note takers who routinely record just one third of a lesson's important information in their notes. This is unfortunate, because the number of lesson points recorded in notes is positively correlated with student achievement. Moreover, both the activity of recording notes and the subsequent review of notes are advantageous.…
Descriptors: Notetaking, Skill Development, Writing Skills, Teacher Role
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Hoicka, Elena; Butcher, Jessica – Cognitive Science, 2016
While separate pieces of research found parents offer toddlers cues to express that they are (1) joking and (2) pretending, and that toddlers and preschoolers understand intentions to (1) joke and (2) pretend, it is not yet clear whether parents and toddlers consider joking and pretending to be distinct concepts. This is important as…
Descriptors: Parents, Toddlers, Cues, Humor
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Cavagnetto, Andy R.; Kurtz, Kenneth J. – Science Education, 2016
Argument-based interventions in science education have largely been motivated by the perspective that students lack knowledge of argument. Recent studies, however, suggest that contextual factors influence students' argument quality. The authors hypothesize that a key limiting factor lies in students' abilities to recognize when to employ…
Descriptors: Attention, Science Education, Context Effect, Experiments
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Forgeot d'Arc, Baudouin; Ramus, Franck; Lefebvre, Aline; Brottier, Delphine; Zalla, Tiziana; Moukawane, Sanaa; Amsellem, Frédérique; Letellier, Laurence; Peyre, Hugo; Mouren, Marie-Christine; Leboyer, Marion; Delorme, Richard – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2016
Evaluation of faces is an important dimension of social relationships. A degraded sensitivity to facial perceptual cues might contribute to atypical social interactions in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The current study investigated whether face based social judgment is atypical in ASD and if so, whether it could be related to a degraded…
Descriptors: Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Cues, Interpersonal Relationship, Stimuli
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Bulf, Hermann; de Hevia, Maria Dolores; Macchi Cassia, Viola – Developmental Science, 2016
Numbers are represented as ordered magnitudes along a spatially oriented number line. While culture and formal education modulate the direction of this number-space mapping, it is a matter of debate whether its emergence is entirely driven by cultural experience. By registering 8-9-month-old infants' eye movements, this study shows that numerical…
Descriptors: Infants, Number Concepts, Eye Movements, Cues
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Yu, Yue; Kushnir, Tamar – Developmental Psychology, 2016
This study explores the role of a particular social cue--the "sequence" of demonstrated actions and events--in preschooler's categorization. A demonstrator sorted objects that varied on both a surface feature (color) and a nonobvious property (sound made when shaken). Children saw a sequence of actions in which the nonobvious property…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Cues, Classification, Generalization
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Susser, Jonathan A.; Jin, Andy; Mulligan, Neil W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2016
Perceptual fluency manipulations influence metamemory judgments, with more fluently perceived information judged as more memorable. However, it is not always clear whether this influence is driven by actual experienced processing fluency or by beliefs about memory. The current study used an identity-priming paradigm--in which words are preceded by…
Descriptors: Memory, Priming, Beliefs, Learning
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