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Acres, K.; Taylor, K. I.; Moss, H. E.; Stamatakis, E. A.; Tyler, L. K. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Cognitive neuroscientific research proposes complementary hemispheric asymmetries in naming and recognising visual objects, with a left temporal lobe advantage for object naming and a right temporal lobe advantage for object recognition. Specifically, it has been proposed that the left inferior temporal lobe plays a mediational role linking…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Semantics, Patients, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Gasser, Luciano; Keller, Monika – Social Development, 2009
The present study tested the hypothesis of the cognitively competent but morally insensitive bully. On the basis of teacher and peer ratings, 212 young elementary school children were selected and categorized as bullies, bully-victims, victims, and prosocial children. Children's perspective-taking skills were assessed using theory-of-mind tasks,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Perspective Taking, Motivation, Bullying
McElroy, Arnold D., Jr.; Pan, Cheng-Chang – Performance Improvement Quarterly, 2009
This study was designed to explore the effectiveness in student performance and confidence of limited and full device simulators. The 30 employees from an information technology company who participated in this study were assigned to one of three groups. Each group received practice for learning a complex software procedure using traditional…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Information Technology, Educational Technology, Computer Simulation
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Li, Li; Mo, Lei; Wang, Ruiming; Luo, Xueying; Chen, Zhe – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2009
Previous studies have found that proficiency in a second language affects how the meanings of words are accessed. Support for this hypothesis is based on data from explicit memory tasks with bilingual participants who know two languages that are relatively similar phonologically and orthographically (e.g., Dutch-English, French-English). The…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Memory, Chinese, Bilingualism
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Berger, Roland – Physics Teacher, 2007
When opening a thermos flask filled with coffee, one often "hears" the equalization of the pressure difference that appears to be present between the air cavity inside the flask and the surrounding room atmosphere. Recently we discussed this phenomenon while drinking coffee and guessed about the direction of the gas stream accompanying the…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Scientific Concepts
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Kemp, Charles; Perfors, Amy; Tenenbaum, Joshua B. – Developmental Science, 2007
Inductive learning is impossible without overhypotheses, or constraints on the hypotheses considered by the learner. Some of these overhypotheses must be innate, but we suggest that hierarchical Bayesian models can help to explain how the rest are acquired. To illustrate this claim, we develop models that acquire two kinds of…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Logical Thinking, Models, Statistical Analysis
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Nettles, Stephen M.; Petscher, Yaacov – Journal of Personnel Evaluation in Education, 2007
Measurement of principal implementation behaviors has proved difficult to researchers in educational leadership due to a lack of consensus on the operational definitions of leadership constructs. The Principal Implementation Questionnaire (PIQ) was developed and validated with the intention of providing clarity in the assessment of principal…
Descriptors: Reading Programs, Instructional Leadership, Hypothesis Testing, Causal Models
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DeBruine, Lisa M.; Jones, Benedict C.; Unger, Layla; Little, Anthony C.; Feinberg, David R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
Although the averageness hypothesis of facial attractiveness proposes that the attractiveness of faces is mostly a consequence of their averageness, 1 study has shown that caricaturing highly attractive faces makes them mathematically less average but more attractive. Here the authors systematically test the averageness hypothesis in 5 experiments…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Interpersonal Attraction, Hypothesis Testing, Experiments
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Keast, Amber; Brewer, Neil; Wells, Gary L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2007
Two experiments examined children's metacognitive monitoring of recognition judgments within an eyewitness identification paradigm. A confidence-accuracy (CA) calibration approach was used to examine patterns of calibration, over-/underconfidence, and resolution. In Experiment 1, children (n=619, mean age=11 years 10 months) and adults (n=600)…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Children, Adults, Recognition (Psychology)
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Verbruggen, Frederick; Liefooghe, Baptist; Vandierendonck, Andre; Demanet, Jelle – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
In the task-switching literature, it has frequently been demonstrated that although advance task preparation reduces the switch cost, it never really eliminates the switch cost. This remaining residual switch cost received much attention, and it has been argued that advance preparation is restricted in nature. In the present study, the role of…
Descriptors: Cues, Experiments, Hypothesis Testing, Performance Factors
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Picard, Delphine; Vinter, Annie – Child Development, 2007
The present experiments were aimed at testing Karmiloff-Smith's (1992) assumption that representational flexibility in drawing behavior requires the relaxation of a sequential constraint. A total of two hundred and forty 5- to 9-year-old children produced cross-category drawings (e.g., a house with wings) in 4 conditions. The results indicated…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Children, Child Development, Sequential Approach
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Robbins, Rachel; McKone, Elinor – Cognition, 2007
In the debate between expertise and domain-specific explanations of "special" processing for faces, a common belief is that behavioural studies support the expertise hypothesis. The present article refutes this view, via a combination of new data and review. We tested dog experts with confirmed good individuation of exemplars of their…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Behavioral Science Research, Physical Characteristics, Animals
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Schochet, Peter Z. – National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, 2008
This report presents guidelines for addressing the multiple comparisons problem in impact evaluations in the education area. The problem occurs due to the large number of hypothesis tests that are typically conducted across outcomes and subgroups in these studies, which can lead to spurious statistically significant impact findings. The…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Testing, Hypothesis Testing, Statistical Significance
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Myers, Mark G.; Prochaska, Judith J. – Substance Abuse, 2008
Although tobacco use is reported by the majority of substance use disordered (SUD) youth, little work has examined tobacco focused interventions with this population. The present study is an initial investigation of the effect of a tobacco use intervention on adolescent SUD treatment outcomes. Participants were adolescents in SUD treatment taking…
Descriptors: Intervention, Smoking, Outcomes of Treatment, Adolescents
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Christophe, Anne; Millotte, Severine; Bernal, Savita; Lidz, Jeffrey – Language and Speech, 2008
This paper focuses on how phrasal prosody and function words may interact during early language acquisition. Experimental results show that infants have access to intermediate prosodic phrases (phonological phrases) during the first year of life, and use these to constrain lexical segmentation. These same intermediate prosodic phrases are used by…
Descriptors: Nouns, Syntax, Infants, Language Processing
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