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Jones, JoAnna; Lerman, Dorothea C.; Lechago, Sarah – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2014
We taught social responses to young children with autism using an adult as the recipient of the social interaction and then assessed generalization of performance to adults and peers who had not participated in the training. Although the participants' performance was similar across adults, responding was less consistent with peers, and a…
Descriptors: Responses, Autism, Interaction, Generalization
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Arthur, Linet; Cox, Elaine – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2014
Traditionally there has been a tension between evaluation research and so-called pure research which has resulted in evaluation research seldom being recognized by the UK Research Assessment Exercises. The newly configured Research Excellence Framework (REF) will use similar criteria to judge research, notwithstanding the introduction of…
Descriptors: Evaluation Research, Foreign Countries, Focus Groups, Criteria
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Zosuls, Kristina M.; Ruble, Diane N.; Tamis-LeMonda, Catherine S. – Child Development, 2014
This article advances a self-socialization perspective demonstrating that children's understanding of "both" gender categories represents an intergroup cognition that is foundational to the development of gender-stereotyped play. Children's (N = 212) gender category knowledge was assessed at 24 months and play was observed at…
Descriptors: Socialization, Immigrants, Mexican Americans, Toddlers
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Fahlgren, Maria; Brunström, Mats – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2014
The increasing availability of new technologies in schools provides new possibilities for the integration of technology in mathematics education. However, research has shown that there is a need for new kinds of task that utilize the affordances provided by new technology. Numerous studies have demonstrated that dynamic geometry environments…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Teaching Methods, Geometry
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Altmann, Lori J. P.; Hazamy, Audrey A.; Carvajal, Pamela J.; Benjamin, Michelle; Rosenbek, John C.; Crosson, Bruce – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2014
Purpose: In this study, the authors assessed how the addition of intentional left-hand gestures to an intensive treatment for anomia affects 2 types of discourse: picture description and responses to open-ended questions. Method: Fourteen people with aphasia completed treatment for anomia comprising 30 treatment sessions over 3 weeks. Seven…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Pictorial Stimuli, Responses, Aphasia
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Nelson, Lauri H.; Powell, Katherine L.; Bloom, Sara E.; Lignugariskraft, Benjamin – Volta Review, 2014
Purpose: Basic concepts are the academic building blocks for preschool children in early education programs and are important for academic success and higher order thinking. Recommended strategies for teaching basic concepts include using positive examples, non-examples, highlighting critical features of concepts through continuous conversion,…
Descriptors: Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Early Childhood Education, Preschool Teachers
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Mueller, Nancy; Tikoo, Mohan; Wang, Haohao – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2012
In this note, we offer a proof of a variant of Morley's triangle theorem, when the exterior angles of a triangle are trisected. We also offer a generalization of Morley's theorem when angles of an "n"-gon are "n"-sected. (Contains 9 figures.)
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Algebra, Generalization
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Frederickson, Greg N. – College Mathematics Journal, 2012
How many rods does it take to brace a square in the plane? Once Martin Gardner's network of readers got their hands on it, it turned out to be fewer than Raphael Robinson, who originally posed the problem, thought. And who could have predicted the stunning solutions found subsequently for various generalizations of the problem?
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Plane Geometry, Problem Solving, Generalization
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Unkelbach, Christian; Stahl, Christoph; Forderer, Sabine – Learning and Motivation, 2012
Evaluative conditioning (EC) refers to changes in people's evaluative responses toward initially neutral stimuli (CSs) by mere spatial and temporal contiguity with other positive or negative stimuli (USs). We investigate whether changing CS features from conditioning to evaluation also changes people's evaluative response toward these CSs. We used…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Classical Conditioning, Stimulus Generalization, Evaluation
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Henderson, Annette M. E.; Woodward, Amanda L. – Developmental Science, 2012
As with all culturally relevant human behaviours, words are meaningful because they are shared by the members of a community. This research investigates whether 9-month-old infants understand this fundamental fact about language. Experiment 1 examined whether infants who are trained on, and subsequently habituated to, a new word-referent link…
Descriptors: Infants, Language, Behavior, Social Cognition
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Stewart, Ian; McElwee, John; Ming, Siri – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2013
Language generativity can be described as the ability to produce sentences never before said, and to understand sentences never before heard. One process often cited as underlying language generativity is response generalization. However, though the latter seems to promise a technical understanding of the former at a process level, an…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Generalization, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
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Berman, Jared M. J.; Graham, Susan A.; Callaway, Dallas; Chambers, Craig G. – Child Development, 2013
Two experiments examined 4- and 5-year-olds' use of vocal affect to learn new words. In Experiment 1 (n = 48), children were presented with two unfamiliar objects, first in their original state and then in an altered state (broken or enhanced). An instruction produced with negative, neutral, or positive affect, directed children to find the…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Speech, Language Acquisition, Psychological Patterns
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Minkina, Irene; Ojemann, Jeffrey G.; Grabowski, Thomas J.; Silkes, JoAnn P.; Phatak, Vaishali; Kendall, Diane L. – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2013
Purpose: Studies investigating language deficits in individuals with left temporal-lobe epilepsy have consistently demonstrated impairments in proper name retrieval. The aim of this Phase I rehabilitation study was to investigate the effects of a linguistically distributed word retrieval treatment on proper name retrieval in an individual with…
Descriptors: Epilepsy, Language Impairments, Naming, Therapy
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McCartney, Mark – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2013
A well-known mathematical puzzle regarding a worm crawling along an elastic rope is considered. The resulting generalizations provide examples for use in a teaching context including applications of series summation, the use of the integrating factor for the solution of differential equations, and the evaluation of definite integrals. A number of…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Puzzles, Mathematics Instruction, Calculus
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Kurtz, Kenneth J.; Levering, Kimery R.; Stanton, Roger D.; Romero, Joshua; Morris, Steven N. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
The findings of Shepard, Hovland, and Jenkins (1961) on the relative ease of learning 6 elemental types of 2-way classifications have been deeply influential 2 times over: 1st, as a rebuke to pure stimulus generalization accounts, and again as the leading benchmark for evaluating formal models of human category learning. The litmus test for models…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Program Evaluation, Stimulus Generalization, Experiments
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