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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Boels, Lonneke – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2023
Gaze data are still uncommon in statistics education despite their promise. Gaze data provide teachers and researchers with a new window into complex cognitive processes. This article discusses how gaze data can inform and be used by teachers both for their own teaching practice and with students. With our own eye-tracking research as an example,…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Eye Movements, Data, Cognitive Processes
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Godfroid, Aline; Hui, Bronson – Second Language Research, 2020
Eye tracking has become an increasingly popular research methodology among language researchers to examine online cognitive processing of second-language (L2) speakers and bilinguals. As the scope of eye-tracking research expands, there is a need to ensure that the methodology is used properly, so as to safeguard the validity of research findings…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Language Research, Second Language Learning, Validity
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Nückles, Matthias – Educational Psychology Review, 2021
In this discussion paper, teaching and learning are characterized as being situated, complex, and reciprocally interactive activities. Accordingly, a teacher's pedagogical actions are always action and reaction at the same time. Irrespective of the reciprocally interactive nature of teaching and learning, educational research has sought to…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Eye Movements, Educational Research, Teacher Education
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Wang, Jiahui – Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 2022
Teacher educators use various measures to gauge pre-service teachers' knowledge, skills, and attitudes, including behavioral measures, self-report questionnaires, and interviews. These measures often fail to capture the granularities of the teaching and learning processes. As such, there has been a burgeoning and recent interest in the use of…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Measurement Equipment, Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers
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Godfroid, Aline; Winke, Paula; Conklin, Kathy – Second Language Research, 2020
In this paper, we review how eye tracking, which offers millisecond-precise information about how language learners orient their visual attention, can be used to investigate a variety of processes involved in the multifaceted endeavor of second language acquisition (SLA). In particular, we review the last 15 years of research in SLA, in which…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Eye Movements, Language Processing, Language Research
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Thomas, Nathan – Reading in a Foreign Language, 2020
The incidental or implicit learning of vocabulary has long been a topic of interest in various disciplines. In studies on foreign language acquisition, reading is often the activity that researchers use to generate their findings. "Reading in a Foreign Language" has maintained its position at the forefront of this research, consistently…
Descriptors: Incidental Learning, Second Language Learning, Vocabulary Development, Code Switching (Language)
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Ng, Betsy; Ong, Aloysius Kian Keong – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2018
The purpose of this article is to offer insights into current understanding of digital learning environments (DLEs) from a neuroscientific perspective. Cognitive neuroscience methods are increasingly applied in educational research to examine the neural underpinnings of learning. As such, neuroscientific evidence can play an important role in…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Higher Education
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Liversedge, Simon P; Hyona, Jukka; Rayner, Keith – Journal of Research in Reading, 2013
Chinese written language is different from alphabetic written languages in many respects, and for this reason, interest in the nature of the cognitive processes underlying Chinese reading has flourished over recent years. A number of researchers have used eye movement methodology as a measure of on-line processing to understand more about…
Descriptors: Chinese, Eye Movements, Reading, Cognitive Processes
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Miller, Brian W. – Educational Psychologist, 2015
Self-paced reading and eye-tracking can be used to measure microlevel student engagement during science instruction. These methods imply a definition of engagement as the quantity and quality of mental resources directed at an object and the emotions and behaviors entailed. This definition is theoretically supported by models of reading…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Cognitive Processes, Learner Engagement, Science Instruction
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Rayner, Keith; Ardoin, Scott P.; Binder, Katherine S. – School Psychology Review, 2013
Issues related to research on children's eye movements during reading are discussed. Specifically, the following topics are addressed: (1) basic methodological issues, (2) prior research findings on children's reading, (3) research that is missing in the literature regarding children's eye movements during reading, (4) applied…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Children, Reading Skills, Research Methodology
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Miller, Brett; O'Donnell, Carol – School Psychology Review, 2013
The cumulative body of eye movement research provides significant insight into how readers process text. The heart of this work spans roughly 40 years reflecting the maturity of both the topics under study and experimental approaches used to investigate reading. Recent technological advancements offer increased flexibility to the field, providing…
Descriptors: Reading, Eye Movements, Individual Differences, Literacy
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Dundas, Eva M.; Best, Catherine A.; Minshew, Nancy J.; Strauss, Mark S. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2012
It has been established that typically developing individuals have a bias to attend to facial information in the left visual field (LVF) more than in the right visual field. This bias is thought to arise from the right hemisphere's advantage for processing facial information, with evidence suggesting it to be driven by the configural demands of…
Descriptors: Autism, Visual Discrimination, Comparative Analysis, Visual Perception
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German, Tamsin C.; Cohen, Adam S. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
The potential utility of a distinction between "automatic (or spontaneous) and implicit" versus "controlled and explicit" processes in theory of mind (ToM) is undercut by the fact that the terms can be employed to describe different but related distinctions within cognitive systems serving that function. These include distinctions in the…
Descriptors: Cues, Theory of Mind, Cognitive Processes, Beliefs
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Nitschke, Kai; Ruh, Nina; Kappler, Sonja; Stahl, Christoph; Kaller, Christoph P. – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Understanding the functional neuroanatomy of planning and problem solving may substantially benefit from better insight into the chronology of the cognitive processes involved. Based on the assumption that regularities in cognitive processing are reflected in overtly observable eye-movement patterns, here we recorded eye movements while…
Descriptors: Evidence, Eye Movements, Problem Solving, Short Term Memory
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Billock, Vincent A.; Tsou, Brian H. – Psychological Bulletin, 2012
An extraordinary variety of experimental (e.g., flicker, magnetic fields) and clinical (epilepsy, migraine) conditions give rise to a surprisingly common set of elementary hallucinations, including spots, geometric patterns, and jagged lines, some of which also have color, depth, motion, and texture. Many of these simple hallucinations fall into a…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Geometric Concepts, Biological Influences, Spatial Ability
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