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Desmeules-Trudel, Félix; Moore, Charlotte; Zamuner, Tania S. – Journal of Child Language, 2020
Bilingual children cope with a significant amount of phonetic variability when processing speech, and must learn to weigh phonetic cues differently depending on the cues' respective roles in their two languages. For example, vowel nasalization is coarticulatory and contrastive in French, but coarticulatory-only in English. In this study, we…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, Bilingualism, Children, Young Children
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Johnson, Kayla M. – Teachers College Record, 2020
Background/Context: Photos are a powerful tool for eliciting stories that may otherwise go untold in traditional interview formats. Photo-elicitation type methods vary widely in their ontological, epistemological, and teleological orientations, providing different tools for understanding participants' experiences and interpretations of those…
Descriptors: Photography, Interviews, Research Methodology, Personal Narratives
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Santone, Elizabeth; Crothers, Laura M.; Kolbert, Jered B.; Miravalle, Joseph – Journal of School Counseling, 2020
The social information processing (SIP) model, which involves a sequence of six cognitive processing steps, is frequently used by researchers to understand proactive and reactive aggression in youth; however, there has been little discussion in the literature regarding the application of the SIP model in school counseling. This article presents a…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Aggression, Cognitive Processes, Bullying
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Marecka, Marta; Fosker, Tim; Szewczyk, Jakub; Kalamala, Patrycja; Wodniecka, Zofia – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2020
This study tested whether individual sensitivity to an auditory perceptual cue called amplitude rise time (ART) facilitates novel word learning. Forty adult native speakers of Polish performed a perceptual task testing their sensitivity to ART, learned associations between nonwords and pictures of common objects, and were subsequently tested on…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cues, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Vocabulary Development
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Hefer, Carmen; Dreisbach, Gesine – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
There is much evidence showing that the prospect of performance-contingent reward increases the usage of cuing information and cognitive stability. In a recent study, we showed that participants under reward conditions even continued using cues even when they were no longer predictive of the required response rule, even at the expense of higher…
Descriptors: Rewards, Contingency Management, Cues, Reaction Time
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Hanna, Joy E.; Brennan, Susan E.; Savietta, Kelly J. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2020
During face-to-face communication, people use visual cues about what their partners are attending to as they process language. An eyetracking experiment explored how addressees use speakers' eye gaze and head orientation while interpreting references to objects in a spatial task. Thirty-six naive director/matcher pairs seated face-to-face were…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Visual Stimuli, Cues, Interpersonal Communication
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Yeo, Lian-Ming; Tzeng, Yuh-Tsuen – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2020
The present study attempted to replicate the previous results of Hu et al. (Learning and Instruction 35:85-93 2015) and further examined the boundary condition of tracing gesture whether its cognitive effect is merely comparable with other attention-guiding means, i.e., textual attention cueing, in two different learning tasks in nature. In two…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Attention, Cues, Middle School Students
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Fishovitz, Jennifer; Crawford, Garland L.; Kloepper, Kathryn D. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
Games are a way to engage students with course material in a low-stakes environment. In the popular game app "Heads Up!", participants give clues to a guesser who is holding a word on their forehead. Here, we present a modified version of this game where students are required to give clues in a specific order that emphasizes higher-order…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Computer Software, Computer Games, Cues
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Grella, Stephanie L.; Fortin, Amanda H.; McKissick, Olivia; Leblanc, Heloise; Ramirez, Steve – Learning & Memory, 2020
Systems consolidation (SC) theory proposes that recent, contextually rich memories are stored in the hippocampus (HPC). As these memories become remote, they are believed to rely more heavily on cortical structures within the prefrontal cortex (PFC), where they lose much of their contextual detail and become schematized. Odor is a particularly…
Descriptors: Olfactory Perception, Fear, Memory, Recall (Psychology)
Wu, Sally P. W.; Van Veen, Barry; Rau, Martina A. – Grantee Submission, 2020
Background: Recent engineering education research has found improved learning outcomes when instructors engage students actively (e.g., through practice problems) rather than passively (e.g., in lectures). As more instructors shift toward active learning, research needs to identify how different types of activities affect students' cognitive…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Prompting, Cues, Active Learning
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Quique, Yina M.; Evans, William S.; Ortega-Llebaría, Marta; Zipse, Lauryn; Walsh Dickey, Michael – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2022
Purpose: Script training is a well-established treatment for aphasia, but its evidence comes almost exclusively from monolingual English speakers with aphasia. Furthermore, its active ingredients and profiles of people with aphasia (PWA) that respond to this treatment remain understudied. This study aimed to adapt a scripted-sentence learning…
Descriptors: Patients, Profiles, Spanish Speaking, Aphasia
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Howansky, Kristina; Maimon, Melanie; Sanchez, Diana – Teaching of Psychology, 2022
Background: Students with marginalized identities report a lack of cultural competence among faculty in higher education classrooms. Identity safety cues (ISCs) signal to minority group members that their identities are valued and respected. Objective: The purpose of this study was to test for differences in students' perceptions of their…
Descriptors: Safety, Cues, Student Attitudes, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance
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West, Kelsey L.; Fletcher, Katelyn K.; Adolph, Karen E.; Tamis-LeMonda, Catherine S. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Infants learn nouns during object-naming events--moments when caregivers name the object of infants' play (e.g., ball as infant holds a ball). Do caregivers also label the actions of infants' play (e.g., roll as infant rolls a ball)? We investigated connections between mothers' verb inputs and infants' actions. We video-recorded 32 infant-mother…
Descriptors: Mothers, Infants, Child Behavior, Verbs
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Milewski, Steven D.; Williamson, Jeanine M. – Public Services Quarterly, 2018
In reflective practice, librarians think back on their instruction to improve it, and this study addresses guidance provided for reflection on citation management instruction. We refined a previously developed reflective practice template for citation management instruction by asking instructors to critique the template's set of reflective…
Descriptors: Reflective Teaching, Library Instruction, Citations (References), Librarians
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Lee, I.-Jui; Chen, Chien-Hsu; Wang, Chuan-Po; Chung, Chi-Hsuan – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2018
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are characterized by a reduced ability to appropriately express social greetings. Studies have indicated that individuals with ASD might not recognize the crucial nonverbal cues that usually aid social interaction. Social reciprocity depends on the ability to empathize with others, to be aware of emotional and…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Autism, Children
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