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Kondo, Yutaka; Fujita, Taro; Kunimune, Susumu; Jones, Keith; Kumakura, Hiroyuki – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2014
While representations of 3D shapes are used in the teaching of geometry in lower secondary school, it is known that such representations can provide difficulties for students. In this paper, we report findings from a classroom experiment in which Grade 7 students (aged 12-13) tackled a problem in 3D geometry that was, for them, quite challenging.…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Secondary School Mathematics, Grade 7
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Allen, Lauren K.; Eagleson, Roy; de Ribaupierre, Sandrine – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2016
Neuroanatomy is one of the most challenging subjects in anatomy, and novice students often experience difficulty grasping the complex three-dimensional (3D) spatial relationships. This study evaluated a 3D neuroanatomy e-learning module, as well as the relationship between spatial abilities and students' knowledge in neuroanatomy. The study's…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Neurosciences, Undergraduate Students, Medical Students
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Dirk, Judith; Schmiedek, Florian – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2016
Children experience good and bad days in their performance. Although this phenomenon is well-known to teachers, parents, and students it has not been investigated empirically. We examined whether children's working memory performance varies systematically from day to day and to which extent fluctuations at faster timescales (i.e., occasions,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Short Term Memory, Grade 3, Grade 4
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Rosen, Dana; Palatnik, Alik; Abrahamson, Dor – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2016
Mathematics education practitioners and researchers have long debated best pedagogical practices for introducing new concepts. Our design-based research project evaluated a heuristic framework, whereby students first develop acontextual sensorimotor schemes and only then extend these schemes to incorporate both concrete narratives (grounding) and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation
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Hakak, Alireza Mahdizadeh; Biloria, Nimish; Rahimi, Mozhgan Raouf – International Journal of Virtual and Personal Learning Environments, 2012
What can be extracted as a common definition amongst near 100 different definitions of creativity according to different disciplines is: Creativity is a new combination of what you have in your inventory of experiences + intuition. It can be considered that expanding the inventory of experiences can gradually help in novel combination of…
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Architecture, Creativity, Virtual Classrooms
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Lufler, Rebecca S.; Zumwalt, Ann C.; Romney, Carla A.; Hoagland, Todd M. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2012
The ability to mentally manipulate objects in three dimensions is essential to the practice of many clinical medical specialties. The relationship between this type of visual-spatial ability and performance in preclinical courses such as medical gross anatomy is poorly understood. This study determined if visual-spatial ability is associated with…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Visualization, Improvement, Medical Students
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Huang, Liqiang; Pashler, Harold – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Selective attention in multidimensional displays has usually been examined using search tasks requiring the detection of a single target. We examined the ability to perceive a spatial structure in multi-item subsets of a display that were defined either conjunctively or disjunctively. Observers saw two adjacent displays and indicated whether the…
Descriptors: Attention, Selection, Spatial Ability, Visual Stimuli
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Imhof, Birgit; Scheiter, Katharina; Edelmann, Jorg; Gerjets, Peter – Learning and Instruction, 2012
Two studies investigated the effectiveness of dynamic and static visualizations for a perceptual learning task (locomotion pattern classification). In Study 1, seventy-five students viewed either dynamic, static-sequential, or static-simultaneous visualizations. For tasks of intermediate difficulty, dynamic visualizations led to better…
Descriptors: Time Factors (Learning), Spatial Ability, Perception, Visual Aids
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Barnett, Scot – Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, 2012
Space matters, and regardless of our commitments to one theoretical framework or another, we should continue to invite students to write about space and about their embodied experiences with/in space. In so doing, however, we should be mindful of the worldviews our spatial rhetorics and pedagogies present and authorize, however implicitly.
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Spatial Ability, Teaching Methods
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Franconeri, Steven L.; Scimeca, Jason M.; Roth, Jessica C.; Helseth, Sarah A.; Kahn, Lauren E. – Cognition, 2012
Visual processing breaks the world into parts and objects, allowing us not only to examine the pieces individually, but also to perceive the relationships among them. There is work exploring how we perceive spatial relationships within structures with existing representations, such as faces, common objects, or prototypical scenes. But strikingly,…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Numeracy, Spatial Ability, Correlation
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Juhos, Csongor; Quelhas, Ana Cristina; Johnson-Laird, P. N. – Cognition, 2012
The mental model theory postulates that the meanings of assertions, and knowledge about their context can "modulate" the logical meaning of sentential connectives, such as "if" and "or". One known effect of modulation is to block the representation of possibilities to which a proposition refers. But, modulation should also add relational…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Inferences, Models, Theories
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Honomichl, Ryan D.; Chen, Zhe – Developmental Psychology, 2011
Preschoolers are typically unable to switch sorting rules during the Dimensional Change Card Sort task. One explanation for this phenomenon is attentional inflexibility (Kirkham, Cruess, & Diamond, 2003). In 4 experiments with 3- to 4-year-olds, we tested this hypothesis by examining the influence of dimensional salience on switching performance.…
Descriptors: Attention, Preschool Children, Cognitive Processes, Spatial Ability
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Nunez, Rafael; Doan, D.; Nikoulina, Anastasia – Cognition, 2011
Numbers are fundamental entities in mathematics, but their cognitive bases are unclear. Abundant research points to linear space as a natural grounding for number representation. But, is number representation fundamentally spatial? We disentangle number representation from standard number-to-line reporting methods, and compare numerical…
Descriptors: Numbers, Spatial Ability, Comparative Analysis, Cognitive Processes
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Street, Sandra Y.; James, Karin H.; Jones, Susan S.; Smith, Linda B. – Child Development, 2011
Three experiments examine 18- to 24-month-old (N = 78) toddlers' ability to spatially orient objects by their major axes for insertion into a slot. This is a simplified version of the posting task that is commonly used to measure dorsal stream functioning. The experiments identify marked developmental changes in children's ability to preorient…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Spatial Ability, Child Development, Age Differences
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Fischer, Martin H.; Shaki, Samuel – Brain and Cognition, 2011
The commentary by Treccani and Umilta (2011) on our recent paper in this journal (Fischer et al., 2010) usefully broadens the perspective on numerical cognition for a general readership and clarifies (or raises) some fundamental issues of cognitive representation. Our response to this commentary is organized into three main sections that focus…
Descriptors: Numbers, Cognitive Processes, Spatial Ability, Association (Psychology)
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