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Fadde, Peter J. – Technology, Instruction, Cognition and Learning, 2009
This article introduces "expertise-based training" (XBT) as an instructional design theory that draws on the theories, findings, and methods of expertise research in order to create instructional strategies that can hasten the development of advanced learners into experts. The central tenants of XBT are: 1) Key cognitive sub-skills that…
Descriptors: Expertise, Training, Instructional Design, Skill Development
Hess, Karin K.; Jones, Ben S.; Carlock, Dennis; Walkup, John R. – Online Submission, 2009
To teach the rigorous skills and knowledge students need to succeed in future college-entry courses and workforce training programs, education stakeholders have increasingly called for more rigorous curricula, instruction, and assessments. Identifying the critical attributes of rigor and measuring its appearance in curricular materials is…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Classification, Matrices, Curriculum Development
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Keil, Frank C. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2003
Focuses on an important aspect of conceptual thinking--the role of causal notions in the content of our concepts. Presents a set of experiments introducing the Illusion of Explanatory Depth (IOED), in which he shows that people confidently believe they know how things work, but when challenged are forced to acknowledge that their understanding is…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
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Schrag, Francis – Teachers College Record, 1989
This article argues that attempts to identify criteria that mark out higher-order thinking and distinguish it from lower-order thinking are still far from satisfactory. Bloom's cognitive hierarchy is discussed, as are the characteristics of higher-order thinking assembled by Resnick. (IAH)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Vertical Organization
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Maris, E. – Psychometrika, 1999
Presents a new class of models for person-by-items data. The essential new feature of the class is the representation of persons through membership in multiple latent classes, each of which belongs to one latent classification. Illustrates use of one of these models and compares them to some models in the literature. (SLD)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Estimation (Mathematics)
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Mangini, Michael C.; Biederman, Irving – Cognitive Science, 2004
When we look at a face, we readily perceive that person's gender, expression, identity, age, and attractiveness. Perceivers as well as scientists have hitherto had little success in articulating just what information we are employing to achieve these subjectively immediate and effortless classifications. We describe here a method that estimates…
Descriptors: Human Body, Classification, Cognitive Processes
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Yamazaki, Y.; Aust, U.; Huber, L.; Hausmann, M.; Gunturkun, O. – Cognition, 2007
This study was aimed at revealing which cognitive processes are lateralized in visual categorizations of "humans" by pigeons. To this end, pigeons were trained to categorize pictures of humans and then tested binocularly or monocularly (left or right eye) on the learned categorization and for transfer to novel exemplars (Experiment 1). Subsequent…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Classification, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Memory
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Recker, Kara M.; Plumert, Jodie M.; Hund, Alycia M.; Reimer, Rachel – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2007
This investigation tracked changes in categorical bias (i.e., placing objects belonging to the same spatial group closer together than they really are) while 7-, 9-, and 11-year-olds and adults were learning a set of locations. Participants learned the locations of 20 objects marked by dots on the floor of an open square box divided into…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Spatial Ability, Memory, Children
Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education, 2008
The Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education (CAS) promotes standards to enhance opportunities for student learning and development from higher education programs and services. Responding to the increased shift in attention being paid by educators and their stakeholders from higher education inputs (i.e., standards and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Outcomes of Education, Student Development, Classification
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Trope, Yaacov; Liberman, Nira – Psychological Review, 2010
People are capable of thinking about the future, the past, remote locations, another person's perspective, and counterfactual alternatives. Without denying the uniqueness of each process, it is proposed that they constitute different forms of traversing psychological distance. Psychological distance is egocentric: Its reference point is the self…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Psychology, Cognitive Processes, Thinking Skills
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Nagata, Ryoichi – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2007
Organization is believed to be related to understanding and memory. Whether this belief was applicable in biochemical education was examined about two years after students had experienced biochemistry classes in their first year. The ability of organizing information in biochemistry was judged from the number of correct links of 886 biochemical…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Inferences, Cognitive Processes, Memory
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Oliver, Dave; Dobele, Tony – Journal of Information Technology Education, 2007
This paper explores the cognitive difficulty of assessment tasks in six first year computing courses within an Information Technology (IT) degree. This issue is pertinent to Information Technology education for two reasons. Degree level education in any field of study is expected to develop higher order thinking skills. Bloom's taxonomy is a…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Classification, Programming, Cognitive Processes
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Fulkerson, Anne L.; Waxman, Sandra R. – Cognition, 2007
Recent studies reveal that naming has powerful conceptual consequences within the first year of life. Naming distinct objects with the same word highlights commonalities among the objects and promotes object categorization. In the present experiment, we pursued the origin of this link by examining the influence of words and tones on object…
Descriptors: Classification, Infants, Language Acquisition, Metalinguistics
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Opfer, John E.; Bulloch, Megan J. – Cognition, 2007
A number of recent models and experiments have suggested that evidence of early category-based induction is an artifact of perceptual cues provided by experimenters. We tested these accounts against the prediction that different relations (causal versus non-causal) determine the types of perceptual similarity by which children generalize. Young…
Descriptors: Novels, Logical Thinking, Cues, Young Children
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Malt, Barbara C.; Sloman, Steven A. – Cognition, 2007
Daily experience is filled with objects that have been created by humans to serve specific purposes. For such objects, the very act of creation may be a key element of how people understand them. But exactly how does creator's intention matter? We evaluated its contribution to two forms of categorization: the name selected for an artifact, and…
Descriptors: Intention, Classification, Intuition, Concept Formation
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