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Amna Ghani; Caroline Di Bernardi Luft; Smadar Ovadio-Caro; Klaus-Robert Müller; Joydeep Bhattacharya – Creativity Research Journal, 2024
Chance favors the prepared mind, said Louis Pasteur. Sometimes, significant breakthroughs occur when we creatively integrate new information, leading to a creative insight or an Aha! moment, while at other times when we fail to use a clue, we remain stuck in our habitual thinking patterns. In this study, we hypothesized that the brain's transient…
Descriptors: Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, Intuition
Merve Basdogan; Ceren Gokmen; Ibrahim Akdilek – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2025
This study examines the pedagogical decision-making of teacher candidates in virtual reality (VR) environments, focusing on instructional strategies, spatial interactions, and associated challenges. Using a descriptive phenomenological approach, class recordings and debriefing interviews with five U.S.-based teacher candidates were analyzed, and…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Spatial Ability, Computer Simulation, Phenomenology
Caruso, Eugene M.; Waytz, Adam; Epley, Nicholas – Cognition, 2010
People can appear inconsistent in their intuitions about sequences of repeated events. Sometimes people believe such sequences will continue (the "hot hand"), and sometimes people believe they will reverse (the "gambler's fallacy"). These contradictory intuitions can be partly explained by considering the perceived intentionality of the agent…
Descriptors: Prediction, Intuition, Beliefs, Intention
Wohlgelernter, Shifra; Diesendruck, Gil; Markson, Lori – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2010
By preschool age, children have a sophisticated assumption about the conventional nature of various kinds of information. The present studies investigated the role of two cues in 2- and 3-year-olds' determination of what is conventional, namely the intentionality and intra-individual consistency in the use of objects. Overall, in Study 1, both 2-…
Descriptors: Cues, Preschool Children, Cognitive Processes, Intuition
Sio, Ut Na; Ormerod, Thomas C. – Psychological Bulletin, 2009
A meta-analytic review of empirical studies that have investigated incubation effects on problem solving is reported. Although some researchers have reported increased solution rates after an incubation period (i.e., a period of time in which a problem is set aside prior to further attempts to solve), others have failed to find effects. The…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Problem Solving, Intuition, Creative Thinking
Glockner, Andreas; Betsch, Tilmann – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
It has been repeatedly shown that in decisions under time constraints, individuals predominantly use noncompensatory strategies rather than complex compensatory ones. The authors argue that these findings might be due not to limitations of cognitive capacity but instead to limitations of information search imposed by the commonly used experimental…
Descriptors: Cues, Decision Making, Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology
Topolinski, Sascha; Strack, Fritz – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
People can intuitively detect whether a word triad has a common remote associate (coherent) or does not have one (incoherent) before and independently of actually retrieving the common associate. The authors argue that semantic coherence increases the processing fluency for coherent triads and that this increased fluency triggers a brief and…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Semantics, Grammar, Probability
Alter, Adam L.; Oppenheimer, Daniel M.; Epley, Nicholas; Eyre, Rebecca N. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2007
Humans appear to reason using two processing styles: System 1 processes that are quick, intuitive, and effortless and System 2 processes that are slow, analytical, and deliberate that occasionally correct the output of System 1. Four experiments suggest that System 2 processes are activated by metacognitive experiences of difficulty or disfluency…
Descriptors: Cues, Metacognition, Intuition, Critical Thinking
Paavola, Sami; Hakkarainen, Kai – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2005
This article analyzes three approaches to resolving the classical Meno paradox, or its variant, the learning paradox, emphasizing Charles S. Peirce's notion of abduction. Abduction provides a way of dissecting those processes where something new, or conceptually more complex than before, is discovered or learned. In its basic form, abduction is a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cultural Context, Inferences, Expertise

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