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Sinharay, Sandip – Grantee Submission, 2019
Benefiting from item preknowledge (e.g., McLeod, Lewis, & Thissen, 2003) is a major type of fraudulent behavior during educational assessments. This paper suggests a new statistic that can be used for detecting the examinees who may have benefitted from item preknowledge using their response times. The statistic quantifies the difference in…
Descriptors: Test Items, Cheating, Reaction Time, Identification
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Wolf, Mikyung Kim; Yoo, Hanwook; Guzman-Orth, Danielle; Abedi, Jamal – Educational Assessment, 2022
Implementing a randomized controlled trial design, the present study investigated the effects of two types of accommodations, linguistic modification and a glossary, for English learners (ELs) taking a computer-based mathematics assessment. Process data including response time and clicks on glossary words were also examined to better interpret…
Descriptors: Testing Accommodations, English Language Learners, Computer Assisted Testing, Mathematics Tests
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Veneziano, Edy; Bartoli, Eleonora – First Language, 2022
This work is based on previous studies showing that a short conversational intervention (SCI) focusing on the causes of the story events is effective in promoting the causal and mental content of children's narratives. In these studies, however, not all the children improved their narratives after the SCI). The present study examined individual…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Personal Narratives, Story Telling, Executive Function
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Mornati, Giulia; Riva, Valentina; Vismara, Elena; Molteni, Massimo; Cantiani, Chiara – Journal of Child Language, 2022
We investigated online early comprehension in Italian children aged 12 and 20 months, focusing on the role of morphosyntactic features (i.e., gender) carried by determiners in facilitating comprehension and anticipating upcoming words. A naturalistic eye-tracking procedure was employed, recording looking behaviours during a classical…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Morphology (Languages), Italian
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Kuzmina, Yulia; Antipkina, Inna – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
There are two lines of discussion regarding the function of the Approximate Number System (ANS). The first line focuses on the extent to which visual cues affect the estimation of numerosity. The second line investigates the extent to which ANS precision is associated with symbolic math performance. The current study combined these two lines of…
Descriptors: Correlation, Numeracy, Mathematics Achievement, Reaction Time
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Cheng, Dazhi; Shi, Kaihui; Wang, Naiyi; Miao, Xinyang; Zhou, Xinlin – Journal of Intelligence, 2022
Processing speed is divided into general (including perceptual speed and decision speed) and specific processing speed (including reading fluency and arithmetic fluency). Despite several study findings reporting the association between processing speed and children's mathematical achievement, it is still unclear whether general or specific…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Reading Fluency, Arithmetic, Mathematics Skills
Leiva Cardona, Sergio Ramon – ProQuest LLC, 2022
It has long been suggested that contextual facilitation effects (hereafter, context effects) reflect the interaction between the construction of an internal representation of context and the processing of a semantically related word (Kuperberg & Jaeger, 2016; Stanovich, 1980). Listening and reading studies have constantly replicated the…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Grade 3, Grade 4, Grade 5
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Tang, Xiaodan; Schultz, Matthew – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2020
This study aims to examine the potential impacts on repeat examinees' performance by reusing simulation-based items in a high-stakes standardized assessment. We examined change patterns of item scores, ability estimate, score pattern change, response time and compared the performance of repeat examinees who have received repeat items and those who…
Descriptors: Test Items, Repetition, Simulation, Standardized Tests
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Lum, Jarrad A. G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
This study examined the changes in saccadic amplitude associated with learning a visual sequence. The oculomotor system gradually adjusts saccadic parameters when tracking a visual stimulus, which has a predictable trajectory. In these contexts, the change in saccadic amplitudes leads to predictive fixations. That is, fixations made to a position…
Descriptors: Incidental Learning, Sequential Learning, Reaction Time, Eye Movements
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Yildirim-Erbasli, Seyma Nur; Bulut, Okan – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2020
This study investigated the impact of students' test-taking effort on their growth estimates in reading. The sample consisted of 7,602 students (Grades 1 to 4) in the United States who participated in the fall and spring administrations of a computer-based reading assessment. First, a new response dataset was created by flagging both…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Reading Tests, Guessing (Tests), Reaction Time
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Larson, Caroline; Kaplan, David; Kaushanskaya, Margarita; Weismer, Susan Ellis – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Background: This study examined predictive relationships between two indices of language--receptive vocabulary and morphological comprehension--and inhibition in children with specific language impairment (SLI) and typically developing (TD) children. Methods: Participants included 30 children with SLI and 41 TD age-matched peers (8-12 years). At…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Inhibition, Children, Morphology (Languages)
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Witt, Jessica K.; Parnes, Jamie E.; Tenhundfeld, Nathan L. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2020
The gun embodiment effect is the consequence caused by wielding a gun on judgments of whether others are also holding a gun. This effect could be responsible for real-world instances when police officers shoot an unarmed person because of the misperception that the person had a gun. The gun embodiment effect is an instance of embodied cognition…
Descriptors: Weapons, Evaluative Thinking, Human Body, Perception
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Nagels, Leanne; Bastiaanse, Roelien; Baskent, Deniz; Wagner, Anita – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: The current study investigates how individual differences in cochlear implant (CI) users' sensitivity to word-nonword differences, reflecting lexical uncertainty, relate to their reliance on sentential context for lexical access in processing continuous speech. Method: Fifteen CI users and 14 normal-hearing (NH) controls participated in…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Hearing Impairments, Assistive Technology, Accuracy
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Hirai, Masahiro; Muramatsu, Yukako; Nakamura, Miho – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2020
Previous studies show that newborn infants and adults orient their attention preferentially toward human faces. However, the developmental changes of visual attention captured by face stimuli remain unclear, especially when an explicit top-down process is involved. We capitalized on a visual search paradigm to assess how the relative strength of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Visual Perception, Children
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Kim, J.; Bouman, L.; Cayruth, F.; Elliott, C.; Francis, B.; Gogo, E.; Hyman, C.; Marshall, A.; Masters, J.; Olano, W.; Paone, A.; Patel, K.; Richards, L.; Sbardella, C.; Snider, A.; Trinh, B.; Umari, F.; Wilks, H. – Physics Teacher, 2020
These days, smartphones are popular commodities among students in high school and college. Students carry their devices all the time, so why not use such a popular electronic device to measure physical quantities such as "g" in physics labs? In this work, we report a "multiple tasking" method, a measurement technique that we…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Telecommunications
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