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Fienup, Daniel M.; Covey, Daniel P.; Critchfield, Thomas S. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2010
Instructional interventions based on stimulus equivalence provide learners with the opportunity to acquire skills that are not directly taught, thereby improving the efficiency of instructional efforts. The present report describes a study in which equivalence-based instruction was used to teach college students facts regarding brain anatomy and…
Descriptors: College Students, Anatomy, Brain, Intervention
Tam, Matthew D. B. S. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2010
Radiology and radiologists are recognized as increasingly valuable resources for the teaching and learning of anatomy. State-of-the-art radiology department workstations with industry-standard software applications can provide exquisite demonstrations of anatomy, pathology, and more recently, physiology. Similar advances in personal computers and…
Descriptors: Radiology, Visual Aids, Models, Computer Simulation
Cowan, Michele; Arain, Nasir Nisar; Assale, Tawfic Samer Abu; Assi, Abdulelah Hassan; Albar, Raed Alwai; Ganguly, Paul K. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2010
Alfaisal University is a new medical school in Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia that matriculates eligible students directly from high school and requires them to participate in a hybrid problem-based learning (PBL) curriculum. PBL is a well-established student-centered approach, and the authors have sought to examine if a student-centered,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Schools, Problem Based Learning, Anatomy
Kaleth, Anthony S.; Mikesky, Alan E. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2010
This article addresses the question of whether early sport specialization provides a "physiological" advantage for future athletic success. It examines the limited literature related to the effects of early specialization on the body's organ systems: the endocrine system, the muscular system, the nervous system, and the cardiovascular system. The…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Human Body, Specialization, Athletics
Tzoulis, Charalampos; Neckelmann, Gesche; Mork, Sverre J.; Engelsen, Bernt E.; Viscomi, Carlo; Moen, Gunnar; Ersland, Lars; Zeviani, Massimo; Bindoff, Laurence A. – Brain, 2010
Mutations in the catalytic subunit of the mitochondrial DNA-polymerase gamma cause a wide spectrum of clinical disease ranging from infantile hepato-encephalopathy to juvenile/adult-onset spinocerebellar ataxia and late onset progressive external ophthalmoplegia. Several of these syndromes are associated with an encephalopathy that…
Descriptors: Diseases, Radiology, Patients, Genetics
Choudhury, Bipasha; Gouldsborough, Ingrid; Gabriel, Stefan – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2010
Students enrolled in the Optometry program at the University of Manchester are required to take a functional anatomy course during the first year of their studies. Low mean scores in the written examination of this unit for the past two academic years energized staff to rethink the teaching format. Interactive sessions lasting 20 minutes each were…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Games, Optometry, Podiatry
Quince, Thelma A.; Barclay, Stephen I. G.; Spear, Michelle; Parker, Richard A.; Wood, Diana F. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2011
A more humanistic approach toward dissection has emerged. However, student attitudes toward this approach are unknown and the influences on such attitudes are little understood. One hundred and fifty-six first-year medical students participated in a study examining firstly, attitudes toward the process of dissection and the personhood of the…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Measures (Individuals), Depression (Psychology)
Cameron, Mary T. – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2011
This article contends that although Intervention Specialists are presented with a variety of children with diverse challenges that arise from neurological dysfunction, few teacher education programs adequately prepare teachers to understand, recognize and address these needs. The University of Findlay requires candidates in the post-baccalaureate…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Special Education, Neurological Impairments, Developmental Disabilities
Finn, Gabrielle M.; White, Pamela M.; Abdelbagi, Pamela M. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2011
Body painting as a tool for teaching anatomy is becoming increasingly popular as it is fun and diffuses the formal academic context. Students claim bright color plays a significant role in retention of knowledge from painting sessions. Medical students (n = 117) were divided into two conditions: block color (CLR) and black outlines (BLK). Students…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Anatomy, Instructional Effectiveness, Student Attitudes
Adams, Christina M.; Wilson, Timothy D. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2011
The inherent spatial complexity of the human cerebral ventricular system, coupled with its deep position within the brain, poses a problem for conceptualizing its anatomy. Cadaveric dissection, while considered the gold standard of anatomical learning, may be inadequate for learning the anatomy of the cerebral ventricular system; even with…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Laboratory Procedures, Physics, Depth Perception
Johnson, Elizabeth O.; Charchanti, Antonia V.; Troupis, Theodore G. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2012
It has become increasingly apparent that no single method for teaching anatomy is able to provide supremacy over another. In an effort to consolidate and enhance learning, a modernized anatomy curriculum was devised by attempting to take advantage of and maximize the benefits from different teaching methods. Both the more traditional approaches to…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Anatomy, Educational Change, Interdisciplinary Approach
Parkins, Jason M.; Gfroerer, Susan D. – Communique, 2009
Chronic pain is persistent and recurrent pain that tends to fluctuate in severity, quality, regularity, and predictability. It can occur in a single or multiple body regions or organ systems. Some of the most frequently reported types of chronic pain include headaches, recurrent abdominal pain (RAP), and musculoskeletal pain. In contrast to acute…
Descriptors: Pain, Anatomy, School Psychology, Human Body
Hankin, Mark H.; Stoller, Jeremy L. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2009
The neck is not only one of the more challenging anatomical regions to dissect but also has important application to clinical conditions, diseases, and procedures. In this study, we describe two simple modifications for dissection of the neck that (1) aid in the identification and preservation of the cutaneous branches of the cervical plexus and…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Laboratory Procedures, Anatomy, Medical Education
Elizondo-Omana, Rodrigo Enrique; Morales-Gomez, Jesus Alberto; Morquecho-Espinoza, Orlando; Hinojosa-Amaya, Jose Miguel; Villarreal-Silva, Eliud Enrique; Garcia-Rodriguez, Maria de los Angeles; Guzman-Lopez, Santos – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2010
Basic and superior reasoning skills are woven into the clinical reasoning process just as they are used to solve any problem. As clinical reasoning is the central competence of medical education, development of these reasoning skills should occur throughout the undergraduate medical curriculum. The authors describe here a method of teaching…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Undergraduate Study, Medical Education, Anatomy
Brown, Patrick J. P. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2010
Process-oriented guided-inquiry learning (POGIL), a pedagogical technique initially developed for college chemistry courses, has been implemented for 2 yr in a freshman-level anatomy and physiology course at a small private college. The course is populated with students with backgrounds ranging from no previous college-level science to junior and…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Physiology, Anatomy, Institutional Characteristics

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