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Murray, Arthur; Hart, Ian – Physics Education, 2012
The "radioactive dice" experiment is a commonly used classroom analogue to model the decay of radioactive nuclei. However, the value of the half-life obtained from this experiment differs significantly from that calculated for real nuclei decaying exponentially with the same decay constant. This article attempts to explain the discrepancy and…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Intervals, Experiments, Prediction
Mair, Carolyn – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
Understanding how students can better manage their expectations has been a topic of interest in pedagogy for some time, yet solutions remain elusive. This paper describes a recent study which aimed to help students make more realistic predictions by increasing their metacognition. At the outset, participants completed a metacognitive awareness…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Reflective Teaching, Prediction, Scores
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Pyc, Mary A.; Rawson, Katherine A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Although the memorial benefits of testing are well established empirically, the mechanisms underlying this benefit are not well understood. The authors evaluated the mediator shift hypothesis, which states that test-restudy practice is beneficial for memory because retrieval failures during practice allow individuals to evaluate the effectiveness…
Descriptors: Memory, Testing, Study, Theories
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Simmons, Joseph P.; Massey, Cade – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Is optimism real, or are optimistic forecasts just cheap talk? To help answer this question, we investigated whether optimistic predictions persist in the face of large incentives to be accurate. We asked National Football League football fans to predict the winner of a single game. Roughly half (the partisans) predicted a game involving their…
Descriptors: Team Sports, Athletics, Experimental Psychology, Psychological Patterns
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Cimpian, Andrei; Erickson, Lucy C. – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Generic statements, or generics, express generalizations about entire kinds (e.g., ""Girls" are good at a game called "tooki""). In contrast, nongeneric statements express facts about specific (sets of) individuals (e.g., "Jane is good at tooki"). Aside from simply conveying information, generics and nongenerics also instill different causal…
Descriptors: Evidence, Attribution Theory, Females, Children
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Gasiorek, Jessica; Giles, Howard – Human Communication Research, 2012
In two studies, we propose, refine, and test a new model of inferred motive predicting of individuals' reactions to nonaccommodation, defined as communicative behavior that is inappropriately adjusted for participants in an interaction. Inferring a negative motive for others' problematic behavior resulted in significantly less positive evaluations…
Descriptors: Inferences, Motivation, Models, Prediction
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de Castro, Ana Catarina; Machado, Armando – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2012
In a temporal double bisection task, animals learn two discriminations. In the presence of Red and Green keys, responses to Red are reinforced after 1-s samples and responses to Green are reinforced after 4-s samples; in the presence of Blue and Yellow keys, responses to Blue are reinforced after 4-s samples and responses to Yellow are reinforced…
Descriptors: Animals, Reinforcement, Context Effect, Probability
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Hsieh, Chang-ming – Social Indicators Research, 2012
The purpose of this article is to examine the recent claims calling for abolishing domain importance weighting in quality of life (QoL) measures by considering the evidence conceptually and empirically. Based on a close review of evidence presented to date, it is suggested that using the range-of-affect hypothesis as a possible explanation of the…
Descriptors: Evidence, Life Satisfaction, Quality of Life, Questionnaires
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Osborne, Jason W. – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2012
Logistic regression is slowly gaining acceptance in the social sciences, and fills an important niche in the researcher's toolkit: being able to predict important outcomes that are not continuous in nature. While OLS regression is a valuable tool, it cannot routinely be used to predict outcomes that are binary or categorical in nature. These…
Descriptors: Regression (Statistics), Prediction, Mathematics, Probability
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Hansenne, Michel; Legrand, Jessica – International Journal of Educational Research, 2012
Previous studies have shown that both creativity and emotional intelligence (EI) were related to children school performance. In this study, we investigated the incremental validity of EI over creativity in an elementary school setting. Seventy-three children aged from 9 to 12 years old were recruited to participate in the study. Verbal and…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Creativity, Academic Achievement, Elementary School Students
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Piantadosi, Steven T.; Tily, Harry; Gibson, Edward – Cognition, 2012
We present a general information-theoretic argument that all efficient communication systems will be ambiguous, assuming that context is informative about meaning. We also argue that ambiguity allows for greater ease of processing by permitting efficient linguistic units to be re-used. We test predictions of this theory in English, German, and…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Figurative Language, Communications, English
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Taylor, Kirsten I.; Devereux, Barry J.; Acres, Kadia; Randall, Billi; Tyler, Lorraine K. – Cognition, 2012
Conceptual representations are at the heart of our mental lives, involved in every aspect of cognitive functioning. Despite their centrality, a long-standing debate persists as to how the meanings of concepts are represented and processed. Many accounts agree that the meanings of concrete concepts are represented by their individual features, but…
Descriptors: Distinctive Features (Language), Identification, Experiments, Models
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Shafto, Patrick; Kemp, Charles; Mansinghka, Vikash; Tenenbaum, Joshua B. – Cognition, 2011
Most natural domains can be represented in multiple ways: we can categorize foods in terms of their nutritional content or social role, animals in terms of their taxonomic groupings or their ecological niches, and musical instruments in terms of their taxonomic categories or social uses. Previous approaches to modeling human categorization have…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Classification, Inferences, Simulation
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Goldwater, Micah B.; Markman, Arthur B.; Stilwell, C. Hunt – Cognition, 2011
Most theories of categorization posit feature-based representations. Markman and Stilwell (2001) argued that many natural categories name roles in relational systems and therefore they are role-governed categories. There is little extant empirical evidence to support the existence of role-governed categories. Three experiments examine predictions…
Descriptors: Classification, Experiments, Prediction, Theories
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Crossley, Scott A.; Kim, YouJin – Language Assessment Quarterly, 2019
The current study examined the effects of text-based relational (i.e., cohesion), propositional-specific (i.e., lexical), and syntactic features in a source text on subsequent integration of the source text in spoken responses. It further investigated the effects of word integration on human ratings of speaking performance while taking into…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Syntax, Oral Language, Speech Communication
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