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de Groot, Annette M. B. – Language Learning, 2006
This study examined the effects of three stimulus variables and background music on paired-associate learning of foreign language (FL) vocabulary. The stimulus variables were the frequency and concreteness of the native language (L1) words and the (phonotactical) typicality of the FL words. Sixty-four L1-FL pairs were presented for learning six…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Music, Second Language Learning, Vocabulary Development
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MacDonald, Stuart W. S.; Stigsdotter-Neely, Anna; Derwinger, Anna; Backman, Lars – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2006
Rate of forgetting is putatively invariant across individuals, sharing few associations with individual-differences variables known to influence encoding and retrieval. This classic topic in learning and memory was revisited using a novel statistical application, multilevel modeling, to examine whether (a) slopes of forgetting varied across…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Ability, Memory, Individual Differences
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Johnson, Wendy; McGue, Matt; Iacono, William G. – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Most studies have considered the effects of particular characteristics on academic achievement individually, which means that little is known about how they function together. Using the population-based Minnesota Twin Family Study, the authors investigated the effects of child academic engagement (interest, involvement, effort), IQ, depression,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adolescents, Environmental Influences, Genetics
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Maxwell, J. P.; Masters, R. S. W.; Poolton, J. M. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2006
Optimal performance is the goal of all athletes, particularly when rewards are high. However, in pressure situations, many athletes perform suboptimally despite a high motivation to succeed. One of the more popular theories addressing performance breakdown under stress implicates self-focused attention. Attention directed to the self may interfere…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Performance Factors, Anxiety, Athletics
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Lester, David – Death Studies, 2006
The issue of whether suicide can be a good death was separated into two different questions: (1) can suicide be an appropriate death, and (2) can suicide be a rational death? Several definitions of an "appropriate" death were proposed, and suicide was seen as potentially appropriate. Similarly, several criteria for rationality were proposed and…
Descriptors: Suicide, Criteria, Logical Thinking, Social Influences
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Costa-Giomi, Eugenia; Flowers, Patricia J.; Sasaki, Wakaha – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2005
The purpose of this study was to identify behavioral differences between children who dropped out of piano lessons and those who continued for 3 years. Two videotaped first-year lessons of 14 pairs of piano students were systematically observed to record the duration or frequency of occurrence of selected student and teacher behaviors. Students in…
Descriptors: Teacher Behavior, Student Behavior, Dropouts, Student Attitudes
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Jin, Seung-Hyun; Kwon, Yong-Ju; Jeong, Jin-Su; Kwon, Suk-Won; Shin, Dong-Hoon – Brain and Cognition, 2006
The purpose of the present study was to investigate differences in neural information transmission between gifted and normal children involved in scientific hypothesis generation. To investigate changes in the amount of information transmission, the children's averaged-cross mutual information (A-CMI) of EEGs was estimated during their generation…
Descriptors: Gifted, Cognitive Processes, Children, Comparative Analysis
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Strong, Richard; Thomas, Ed; Perini, Matthew; Silver, Harvey – Educational Leadership, 2004
Student differences in learning mathematics are categorized under four different mathematical learning styles. The names of books providing examples on how mathematics teachers can differentiate their classroom instructions are mentioned.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction
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Takkinen, Sanna; Sutama, Timo – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2004
This article presents the characteristics of the life-lines drawn by older Finnish men and women. The study was part of the Evergreen Project, Finland. Seventy-eight persons aged 83-87 participated in an interview, in which they were asked to draw a life-line. The life-line was drawn on a standardized sheet as a continuous line which showed the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Older Adults, Females, Males
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Rankin, Jane L.; Lane, David J.; Gibbons, Frederick X.; Gerrard, Meg – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 2004
Adolescence is frequently described as a period of pervasive self-consciousness, but an age-related peak in adolescence is not consistently obtained, and higher self-consciousness in girls is frequently obtained but not predicted by theoretical accounts. Two cohorts of adolescents (N=393), initially assessed at 13 and 15, completed public and…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Adolescents, Social Behavior, Females
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Noble, Toni – Teachers College Record, 2004
Both the special education and gifted education literature call for a differentiated curriculum to cater for the wide range of student differences in any classroom. Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences was integrated with the revised Bloom's taxonomy to provide a planning tool for curriculum differentiation. Teachers' progress in using the…
Descriptors: Gifted, Classification, Ability Grouping, Multiple Intelligences
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Fraley, R. Chris; Roberts, Brent W. – Psychological Review, 2005
In contemporary psychology there is debate over whether individual differences in psychological constructs are stable over extended periods of time. The authors argue that it is impossible to resolve such debates unless researchers focus on patterns of stability and the developmental mechanisms that may give rise to them. To facilitate this shift…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Individual Differences, Intervals, Meta Analysis
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Johannesen-Schmidt, Mary C.; Eagly, Alice H. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2002
This research used an individual differences approach to test Eagly and Wood's (1999) claim that sex differences in the characteristics that people prefer in mates reflect the tendency for men and women to occupy different social roles in a society. The study related the extent to which participants endorsed the traditional female gender role to…
Descriptors: Sex Role, Gender Differences, Individual Differences, Individual Characteristics
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Ram, Nilam; Chow, Sy-Miin; Bowles, Ryan P.; Wang, Lijuan; Grimm, Kevin; Fujita, Frank; Nesselroade, John R. – Psychometrika, 2005
Weekly cycles in emotion were examined by combining item response modeling and spectral analysis approaches in an analysis of 179 college students' reports of daily emotions experienced over 7 weeks. We addressed the measurement of emotion using an item response model. Spectral analysis and multilevel sinusoidal models were used to identify…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Item Response Theory, Models, College Students
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Henderson, Heather; Schwartz, Caley; Mundy, Peter; Burnette, Courtney; Sutton, Steve; Zahka, Nicole; Pradella, Anna – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Children with autism not only display social impairments but also significant individual differences in social development. Understanding the source of these differences, as well as the nature of social impairments, is important for improved diagnosis and treatments for these children. Current theory and research suggests that individual…
Descriptors: Social Behavior, Interpersonal Relationship, Clinical Diagnosis, Social Development
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