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Akanksha Dochania – European Journal of Education, 2024
Implicit prejudice can be simply understood as any negative feelings or beliefs people hold towards a particular outgroup without being aware of it. One such form is microaggression, which can be defined as everyday verbal or nonverbal subtle, unconscious putdowns, slights, or negative remarks towards members of an outgroup. One of the most common…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Males, College Students, Foreign Students
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Zonghua Shi; Jennifer Shearon; Elena M. Kaufman; Andy Y. Lu; Alexis M. Suarez; Natalie M. Rogler; Miranda R. Miller; Emily R. Cohen-Shikora – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2025
The Illusory Truth Effect (ITE) is a cognitive bias wherein participants rate repeated statements as more truthful relative to new statements. Although this effect may be less adaptive in our current media climate, where repeated information can circulate easily, few studies have examined how to mitigate or reduce it. In the current studies, we…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Bias, Intervention, Evaluative Thinking
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Alireza Akbari; Mohammadtaghi Shahnazari – Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 2025
Purpose: The primary objective of this research paper was to examine the objectivity of the preselected items evaluation (PIE) method, a prevalent translation scoring method deployed by international institutions such as UAntwerpen, UGent and the University of Granada. Design/methodology/approach: This research critically analyzed the scientific…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Translation, Difficulty Level, Validity
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Shengqing He; Chen Chen – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2025
Students expose various intuitions in probability comparison and calculation tasks. Large volumes of research looked into these intuitions by categorizing learners' strategies, but fewer studies considered how these intuitions may be associated with learners' judgments. Even fewer examined the mixed effects of multiple intuitions held by the same…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Middle School Mathematics, Middle School Students, Mathematics Instruction
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Damian Page; Todd Cunningham – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2024
The present study sought to assess the ability of teachers to identify emerging mental health disorders through a novel vignette measure. Canadian certified primary grade teachers (N = 101) completed a survey that included a novel vignette measure. Participants rated the severity of fictitious student behaviors depicted in several vignettes and…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Students
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Benjamin Munson; Chloe Wruck; Nina R. Benway; Jonathan L. Preston – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2024
Purpose: Typically developing children assigned male at birth (AMAB) and children assigned female at birth (AFAB) produce the fricative /s/ differently: AFAB children produce /s/ with a higher spectral peak frequency. This study examined whether implicit knowledge of these differences affects speech-language pathologists'/speech and language…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Age Differences, Bias, Speech Impairments
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David Menendez; Andrea Marquardt Donovan; Olympia N. Mathiaparanam; Vienne Seitz; Nour F. Sabbagh; Rebecca E. Klapper; Charles W. Kalish; Karl S. Rosengren; Martha W. Alibali – Child Development, 2024
Do children think of genetic inheritance as deterministic or probabilistic? In two novel tasks, children viewed the eye colors of animal parents and judged and selected possible phenotypes of offspring. Across three studies (N = 353, 162 girls, 172 boys, 2 non-binary; 17 did not report gender) with predominantly White U.S. participants collected…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Beliefs, Genetics, Probability
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Lauren K. Schiller; Roberto A. Abreu-Mendoza; Miriam Rosenberg-Lee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Decimal numbers are generally assumed to be a straightforward extension of the base-ten system for whole numbers given their shared place value structure. However, in decimal notation, unlike whole numbers, the same magnitude can be expressed in multiple ways (e.g., 0.8, 0.80, 0.800, etc.). Here, we used a number line task with carefully selected…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Computation, Numbers, Bias
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Melissa G. Keith; Lindsey M. Freier; Marie Childers; Isabelle Ponce-Pore; Seth Brooks – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2024
Individuals and organizations frequently tout creative ideas as a desirable goal, and yet, creative ideas are frequently rejected. Creativity researchers have often suggested that creative ideas are rejected because they are perceived as riskier due to their inherent novelty or originality. Although this assumption is prevalent, we are unaware of…
Descriptors: Risk, Correlation, Creativity, Prediction
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Hernandez-Gonzalez, Jeronimo; Herrera, Pedro Javier – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2023
In peer assessment, students assess a task done by their peers, provide feedback and usually a grade. The extent to which these peer grades can be used to formally grade the task is unclear, with doubts often arising regarding their validity. The instructor could supervise the peer assessments, but would not then benefit from workload reduction,…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Supervision, Models, Computation
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Strohmeier, Dagmar; Gradinger, Petra; Yanagida, Takuya – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2022
This study investigated whether social position (e.g., gender, migration, family status), intrapersonal-level (e.g., online risk behaviors, motives of Internet use), interpersonal-level (e.g., victimization and bullying), family-level (e.g., parental mediation), and class-level (e.g., teachers' mediation, ethnic diversity) variables predict…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Females, Bias
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Li, Hua; Shih, Ming-Chieh; Song, Cheng-Jie; Tu, Yu-Kang – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Network meta-analysis combines direct and indirect evidence to compare multiple treatments. As direct evidence for one treatment contrast may be indirect evidence for other treatment contrasts, biases in the direct evidence for one treatment contrast may affect not only the estimate for this particular treatment contrast but also estimates of…
Descriptors: Network Analysis, Meta Analysis, Bias, Evidence
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Schmid, Matthias; Friede, Tim; Klein, Nadja; Weinhold, Leonie – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Recent years have seen the development of many novel scoring tools for disease prognosis and prediction. To become accepted for use in clinical applications, these tools have to be validated on external data. In practice, validation is often hampered by logistical issues, resulting in multiple small-sized validation studies. It is therefore…
Descriptors: Probability, Meta Analysis, Time, Test Validity
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Maya B. Mathur – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analyses can be compromised by studies' internal biases (e.g., confounding in nonrandomized studies) as well as publication bias. These biases often operate nonadditively: publication bias that favors significant, positive results selects indirectly for studies with more internal bias. We propose sensitivity analyses that address two…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Attribution Theory, Publications, Bias
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Vinicius Macuch Silva; Alexandra Lorson; Michael Franke; Chris Cummins; Bodo Winter – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2024
This study investigates how quantifiers are used strategically to serve different argumentative goals. We report two experiments on how English speakers describe the results of school exams when being instructed to frame their descriptions either as a good or bad outcome. Experiment 1 shows that participants have clear preferences for specific…
Descriptors: English, Language Usage, Bias, Semantics
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