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Ernesto Panadero; Pablo Delgado; Lucía Barrenetxea-Mínguez; David Zamorano; Leire Pinedo; Alazne Fernández-Ortube – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2025
The students' dominant language might influence how they use and process a rubric and its subsequent effect on task performance. However, our knowledge about these effects is limited. This study investigates how the dominant language of students is associated with their rubric reading patterns and their task performance in a written landscape…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Spanish Speaking, Language Dominance
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Ellen M. Kok; Diederick C. Niehorster; Anouk van der Gijp; Dirk R. Rutgers; William F. Auffermann; Marieke van der Schaaf; Liesbeth Kester; Tamara van Gog – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Self-monitoring is essential for effectively regulating learning, but difficult in visual diagnostic tasks such as radiograph interpretation. Eye-tracking technology can visualize viewing behavior in gaze displays, thereby providing information about visual search and decision-making. We hypothesized that individually adaptive gaze-display…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Students, Eye Movements, Pretests Posttests
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Ling Wu; Shuxin Wang – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Contemporary technological advancements offer new possibilities for enhancing user creativity. We aimed to explore how technology can boost student creativity to meet the twenty-first century's demand for innovative talent. Based on the 4P model of creativity (person, process, product, and press) and constructivist theory, a virtual reality (VR)…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Brain, Biofeedback, Creativity
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Kalpana Gupta – Journal of Continuing Higher Education, 2024
The purpose of this study is to understand the ways in which meditation practice can be used as an online pedagogical method based on adult learners' experiences with various forms of meditation practices. To arrive at this purpose, the researcher found it necessary to gather data about frequency of use, preferences, and related transformative…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Teaching Methods, Adult Learning, Biofeedback
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Yi Zhang; Ke Xu; Yun Pan; Zhongling Pi; Jiumin Yang – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2025
The current study investigated the effects of segmentation design and drawing on college students' video learning. Participants were 158 college students randomly assigned to view either a segmented or continuous video lecture (video type: segmented vs continuous) and who either received instructed to draw while learning or no instructions at all…
Descriptors: College Students, Video Technology, Lecture Method, Eye Movements
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Ali Nouri – Review of Education, 2025
This paper presents a scoping review of the literature on educational neurotechnology, examining its types, methods, applications, opportunities and challenges. A total of 4236 articles were identified from PubMed, ScienceDirect, Scopus, Web of Science and ERIC, with 471 peer-reviewed studies selected and analysed following PRISMA guidelines and…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Neurosciences, Brain, Biofeedback
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Melinda Lanius; Jingyi Zheng; Ash Abebe – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2024
Math anxiety and academic distress, two interrelated forms of psychological stress, are pervasive problems for undergraduate mathematics students. Most of the research in this area has taken a broad view of the impact this stress has on students' learning across an entire course or, more broadly, the entire curriculum for their degree. To…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mathematics Anxiety, College Mathematics, Metabolism
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Mrinmayi Kulkarni; Allison E. Nickel; Greta N. Minor; Deborah E. Hannula – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Past work has shown that eye movements are affected by long-term memory across different tasks and instructional manipulations. In the current study, we tested whether these memory-based eye movements persist when memory retrieval is under intentional control. Participants encoded multiple scenes with six objects (three faces; three tools). Next,…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Eye Movements, Long Term Memory, Visual Aids
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Akshay Mendhakar; Katarzyna Sierak; Kirren Chana; Helmut Leder – AILA Review, 2025
Most reading technologies claim to provide experiences similar to reading on print paper. This study compared reading across different digital platforms and print books. Digital reading mediums used in this study were reading on a PC screen, a handheld e-reader and an iPad. A total of eighty participants enrolled in various university courses took…
Descriptors: College Students, Learning Modalities, Electronic Books, Handheld Devices
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Robert-Jan Korteland; Ellen Kok; Casper Hulshof; Tamara van Gog – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Adaptive teacher support fosters effective learning in one-to-one teaching sessions, which are a common way of learning complex visual tasks in the health sciences. Adaptive support is tailored to student needs, and this is difficult in complex visual tasks as visual problem-solving processes are covert and thus cannot be directly observed by the…
Descriptors: Allied Health Personnel, Optometry, College Faculty, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Aaron J. Zynda; Shelby Baez; Jessica Wallace; Christopher Kuenze; Tracey Covassin – Measurement in Physical Education and Exercise Science, 2024
This study determined the test-retest reliability of 10 sensorimotor skills assessed by the Senaptec Sensory Station in a population of 100 (80 female, age = 21.6 ± 2.8 years) college-aged individuals (18-30 years). Separate intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) with a two-way mixed-effects model, absolute agreement, and 95% confidence…
Descriptors: Test Reliability, Sensory Experience, Psychomotor Skills, Females
Samantha Kolovson – ProQuest LLC, 2022
My dissertation focuses on coordination around personal data and human-data interaction in a high-stakes, high-performance environment: college sports. In the last decade, wearable tracking technologies--e.g., FitBit, Garmin, Catapult, Whoop, Oura Ring--have introduced new data streams, such as heart rate and sleep measurement, which college…
Descriptors: Personnel Data, Team Sports, Group Dynamics, Information Technology
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Zhongling Pi; Xin Guo; Caixia Liu; Jiumin Yang – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2025
Students are often encouraged to explain recently-taught information to others to enhance their learning in various settings including face-to-face in the classroom, through text, or in educational videos. However, nearly all studies on the impact of explaining things to others have focused on the effects of explaining to a less-knowledgeable…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Prior Learning, Video Technology, Peer Relationship
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Griffin, McKenzie; Campos, Heloisa Cursi; Khramtsova, Irina; Pearce, Amy R. – College Student Journal, 2020
This study's aim was to examine biofeedback, specifically the Heart-Math® Inner Balance technology, as an effective tool for decreasing stress and anxiety while increasing perceived coping ability in college students. Seven students from a university campus were selected to use the device in an A-B-A-B experimental design for four or eight weeks.…
Descriptors: Stress Management, Stress Variables, College Students, Biofeedback
Kiyotaka Suga – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Since Swain's (1985) Output Hypothesis, producing output in second language (L2) has been assumed to be a crucial cognitive process that promotes L2 acquisition, by actively facilitating various cognitive processes (e.g., noticing, hypothesis testing, conscious reflections of own language use, and automatization of the linguistic knowledge) (de…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Language Acquisition, Biofeedback, Eye Movements
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