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Brozina, Karen; Abela, John R. Z. – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2006
The common etiology hypothesis proposes that depression and anxiety commonly co-occur because they share etiological factors. This study examined the specificity of the hopelessness theory in the development of depressive and anxious symptoms in children. Students in Grades 3 through 6 (N = 418, 47% boys) completed measures assessing inferential…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Anxiety, Behavior Theories, Etiology
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Spector, Janet – Reading Psychology an international quarterly, 2005
The double-deficit hypothesis provides a framework for identifying students at-risk for persistent reading difficulties. I examined the temporal stability of four double-deficit subtypes (no-deficit, naming-speed deficit, phonological deficit, and double-deficit) in 197 low-performing, first-grade readers. Concurrent analyses in fall and spring…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Grade 1, Reading Difficulties, High Risk Students
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White, Brian – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This paper presents a generally applicable method for characterizing subjects' hypothesis-testing behaviour based on a synthesis that extends on previous work. Beginning with a transcript of subjects' speech and videotape of their actions, a Reasoning Map is created that depicts the flow of their hypotheses, tests, predictions, results, and…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Hypothesis Testing, Biology, Thinking Skills
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Balasubramanian, Venu; Max, Ludo – Brain and Cognition, 2004
The present study reports on the first case of crossed apraxia of speech (CAS) in a 69-year-old right-handed female (SE). The possibility of occurrence of apraxia of speech (AOS) following right hemisphere lesion is discussed in the context of known occurrences of ideomotor apraxias and acquired neurogenic stuttering in several cases with right…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Females, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Hypothesis Testing
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Deutsch, Katherine M.; Newell, Karl M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
This study examined the effect of age and practice on the structure of children's force variability to test the information processing hypothesis that a reduction of sensorimotor system noise accounts in large part for age-related reductions in perceptual-motor performance variability. In the study, 6-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and young adults…
Descriptors: Children, Young Adults, Psychomotor Skills, Age Differences
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Van Strien, Jan W. – Brain and Language, 2004
To investigate whether concurrent nonverbal sound sequences would affect visual-hemifield lexical processing, lexical-decision performance of 24 strongly right-handed students (12 men, 12 women) was measured in three conditions: baseline, concurrent neutral sound sequence, and concurrent emotional sound sequence. With the neutral sequence,…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Hypothesis Testing, Cognitive Processes
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North, Sarah – Applied Linguistics, 2005
Success in higher education depends on students' ability to meet the writing requirements of their chosen courses, and in many cases this involves adapting to the literacy practices of particular disciplines. While research into professional academic discourse suggests that it may reflect differences in disciplinary culture and epistemology, there…
Descriptors: Essays, Undergraduate Students, Hypothesis Testing, Writing Instruction
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Little, Deborah M.; Shin, Silvia S.; Sisco, Shannon M.; Thulborn, Keith R. – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Eighteen healthy young adults underwent event-related (ER) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of the brain while performing a visual category learning task. The specific category learning task required subjects to extract the rules that guide classification of quasi-random patterns of dots into categories. Following each classification…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Hypothesis Testing, Feedback, Classification
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Hale, Courtney M.; Tager-Flusberg, Helen – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2005
This study investigated the relationship between discourse deficits to a broader range of other symptoms in 57 children with autism. We hypothesized that autism symptomatology, as measured by the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS), would be related to the children?s difficulty in maintaining an ongoing topic of discourse. Children…
Descriptors: Autism, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Children, Dialogs (Language)
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Laband, David N.; Lentz, Bernard F. – Research in Higher Education, 2004
In theory, not-for-profit organizations will be characterized by higher production costs per unit of output than for-profit producers of otherwise-identical goods/services, since profit maximization implies cost minimization per unit of output; breaking even does not imply cost minimization and, indeed, may imply inflated costs. We explore the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Nonprofit Organizations, Institutional Research, Differences
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Monetta, Laura; Ouellet-Plamondon, Clairelaine; Joanette, Yves – Brain and Language, 2006
Lately, many studies have suggested that communication impairments in brain-damaged individuals might be explained--at least in part--in terms of cognitive resource allocation. Reproducing a clinical pattern in normal subjects by using a dual-task treatment might be a way of evaluating the role of cognitive resources in the right hemisphere's…
Descriptors: Patients, Hypothesis Testing, Figurative Language, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Templer, Donald I.; Arikawa, Hiroko – Intelligence, 2006
The impetus for our study was the contention of both Lynn [Lynn, R. (1991) "Race differences in intelligence: A global perspective." "Mankind Quarterly," 31, 255-296] and Rushton [Rushton, J. P. (1995). "Race, evolution and behavior: A life history perspective." New Brunswick, NJ: "Transaction"; Rushton, J.…
Descriptors: Intelligence Quotient, Racial Differences, Correlation, Climate
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Griffin, Marlynn M.; Robinson, Daniel H.; Sarama, Julie – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2005
The conjoint retention hypothesis (CRH) claims that students recall more text information when they study geographic maps in addition to text than when they study text alone, because the maps are encoded spatially (Kulhavy, Lee, & Caterino, 1985). This claim was recently challenged by Griffin and Robinson (2000), who found no advantage for maps…
Descriptors: Retention (Psychology), Hypothesis Testing, Recall (Psychology), Maps
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Beck, Sarah R.; Robinson, Elizabeth J.; Carroll, Daniel J.; Apperly, Ian A. – Child Development, 2006
Two experiments explored whether children's correct answers to counter factual and future hypothetical questions were based on an understanding of possibilities. Children played a game in which a toy mouse could run down either 1 of 2 slides. Children found it difficult to mark physically both possible outcomes, compared to reporting a single…
Descriptors: Educational Experiments, Child Development, Young Children, Probability
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Gibb, Brandon E.; Alloy, Lauren B. – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2006
Providing a developmental extension of the cognitive theories of depression, researchers and theorists (e.g., Cole & Turner, 1993; Rose & Abramson, 1992) have suggested that during early to middle childhood, attributional styles may mediate rather than moderate the association between negative life events and the development of depression. Within…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Grade 4, Grade 5, Children
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