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Beentjes, Johannes W. J.; van der Voort, Tom H. A. – Communication Education, 1993
Compares children's learning from structurally equivalent television and print versions of two stories. Finds that children invested more mental effort in reading than watching television, but the reverse was found using reaction time as a measure; inferential learning does not go better with print at all times; and television and print are not…
Descriptors: Inferences, Intermediate Grades, Learning Processes, Reading
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Magliano, Joseph P.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1993
Considers whether causal antecedent and causal consequence inferences are generated on-line during comprehension and also determined the time course of their activation. Supports a bridging model of inference generation, since causal antecedents were generated online, whereas causal consequences were not. (HB)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education
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Zwaan, Rolf A.; van Oostendorp, Herre – Discourse Processes, 1993
Investigates whether spatial situation models are constructed in naturalistic story comprehension. Claims that, during normal reading, readers are not very much engaged in constructing, maintaining, and updating a spatial situation model. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Inferences, Narration
Stolovitch, Harold D. – Performance and Instruction, 1990
Explains a model that can be used for debriefing after a highly interactive training activity such as role playing or simulation games. Elements of the model include (1) general decompression; (2) factual information from the activity; (3) inferences; (4) transfer, i.e., from the activity to real world situations; (5) generalizations; and (6)…
Descriptors: Data Interpretation, Inferences, Interaction, Learning Strategies
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Moses, Louis J.; Flavell, John H. – Child Development, 1990
Two experiments investigated the possibility that three year olds would do better on tasks in which belief cues were stronger than on standard false belief tasks, in which the children could reason backward to the belief from its effects. Findings provided strong support for the view that three year olds do not fully understand the…
Descriptors: Behavior, Beliefs, Cognitive Ability, Comprehension
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Chen, Patrick Shicheng – Information Processing and Management, 1994
Discussion of relevance and the needs of the users in information retrieval focuses on a deductive object-oriented approach and suggests eight inference rules for the deduction. Highlights include characteristics of a deductive object-oriented system, database and data modeling language, implementation, and user interface. (Contains 24…
Descriptors: Databases, Deduction, Inferences, Information Retrieval
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Robinson, E. J.; Champion, H.; Mitchell, P. – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Examined relationship between children's ability to infer the veracity of an adult's statement and the adult's informedness. Found that children tended to believe utterances from speakers who were better informed than they themselves were and to disbelieve less well-informed speakers, with no age-related differences. Children gave explicit…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
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Klin, Celia M.; Murray, John D.; Levine, William H.; Guzman, Alexandria E. – Discourse Processes, 1999
Investigates the extent to which forward inferences are activated and encoded during reading, as well as their prevalence and their time course. Finds that inferences were encoded and retained in working memory in both high- and low-predictability conditions, and that high-predictability forward inferences were encoded into long-term memory.…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Inferences, Interpersonal Communication
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Kirk, Roger E. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2001
Makes the case that science is best served when researchers focus on the size of effects and their practical significance. Advocates the use of confidence intervals for deciding whether chance or sampling variability is an unlikely explanation for an observed effect. Calls for more emphasis on effect sizes in the next edition of the American…
Descriptors: Effect Size, Hypothesis Testing, Psychology, Research Reports
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Heyman, Gail D.; Gelman, Susan A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2000
Four studies examined the tendency of preschoolers to use verbal labels versus appearance information in making novel inductive inferences. Results revealed that preschoolers tended to use trait labels of "shy" or "outgoing" rather than superficial resemblance in making psychological inferences. These results could not be attributed to biases on…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Induction, Inferences
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Watson, Jane M. – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2001
Follows an earlier study of school students' abilities to draw inferences when comparing two data sets presented in graphical form. Results for individual student development add to the credibility of the cross-age observations as well as support the hierarchical framework suggested by the original study. Documents changes in levels of performance…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Inferences, Mathematics Instruction
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Hakeem, Salih A. – Journal of Education for Business, 2001
Comparison of 88 business students who completed experiential projects involving data collection and inferential analysis with 125 who received lectures only indicated that the active learning method resulted in better understanding of statistics through the application of theory to real-life situations. (SK)
Descriptors: Business Education, Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Lecture Method
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Gopnik, Alison; Sobel, David M.; Schulz, Laura E.; Glymour, Clark – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Investigated in 3 studies whether 2- to 4-year-olds make accurate causal inferences on the basis of patterns of variation and covariation. Found that all three age groups considered information from various patterns of variation and covariation in judgments regarding two objects and activation of a machine. Three- and 4-year-olds used the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Inferences
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Parkhurst, David F. – Bioscience, 2001
Investigates significance tests as a tool for helping to identify real effects in the face of random variation. Speculates that equivalence tests improve the logic of significance testing when demonstrating similarity is important. Reverse tests can help show that failure to reject a null hypothesis does not support that hypothesis. (Contains 30…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Biology, Higher Education, Research Methodology
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Dickins, David W. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2005
Ingenious and seemingly powerful technologies have been developed recently that enable the visualization in some detail of events in the brain concomitant upon the ongoing behavioral performance of a human participant. Measurement of such brain events offers at the very least a new set of dependent variables in relation to which the independent…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Serial Learning, Research Methodology, Behavioral Sciences
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