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Bertrams, Alex; Schlegel, Katja – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2020
People with diagnosed autism or being high in autistic traits have been found to have difficulties with recognizing emotions from nonverbal expressions. In this study, we investigated whether speeded reasoning (reasoning performance under time pressure) moderates the inverse relationship between autistic traits and emotion recognition performance.…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Emotional Response
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Pennycook, Gordon; Trippas, Dries; Handley, Simon J.; Thompson, Valerie A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014
Base-rate neglect refers to the tendency for people to underweight base-rate probabilities in favor of diagnostic information. It is commonly held that base-rate neglect occurs because effortful (Type 2) reasoning is required to process base-rate information, whereas diagnostic information is accessible to fast, intuitive (Type 1) processing…
Descriptors: Probability, Intuition, Cognitive Processes, Physicians
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Gallese, Vittorio; Rochat, Magali; Cossu, Giuseppe; Sinigaglia, Corrado – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Social life rests in large part on the capacity to understand the intentions behind the behavior of others. What are the origins of this capacity? How is one to construe its development in ontogenesis? By assuming that action understanding can be explained only in terms of the ability to read the minds of others--that is, to represent mental…
Descriptors: Social Cognition, Social Life, Comprehension, Inferences
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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
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Hoskins, Sally G.; Stevens, Leslie M. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2009
The rapid and accelerating pace of change in physiology and cell biology, along with the easy access to huge amounts of content, have altered the playing field for science students, yet most students are still mainly taught from textbooks. Of necessity, textbooks are usually broad in scope, cover topics much more superficially than do journal…
Descriptors: Physiology, Cytology, Biology, Knowledge Level
Murnion, William E. – 1987
Advocates and teachers of critical thinking tend to deny that intuition and justification are logical, even though they assume that both processes are rational. However, it can be demonstrated that the relation between intuition and inference, between justification and explanation, is dialectical and complementary, so that there is no mystery as…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Inferences
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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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Cottrell, Jane E.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1996
Investigated beliefs about feeling the stares of an unseen other. Found that most adults and young children believed they could feel the unseen stares of another, and across age there were some increases in beliefs about the feeling. Participants believed that in order to feel stares, some cognitive maturity was required. (MOK)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
Shaklee, Harriet – 1987
Implications of difficulties in using intuitive statistical reasoning are considered as they bear on the theoretic model viewing persons as intuitive scientists who make causal attributions in everyday life. Data sampling strategies and use of judgment rules to identify covariant events were investigated in two studies. Using a rule-analytic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students