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Akgül, Ömer Tugsad – Online Submission, 2022
Metacognitive responsiveness is an individual's sensitivity to metacognitive experiences, awareness, and importance of metacognition, and thus can be helpful in terms of finding out the different levels of metacognitive competencies. This study aims to investigate whether and how different components of metacognition predict metacognitive…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Responses
Cath Ellis; Kane Murdoch – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Current approaches used by educational institutions to address the problem of student cheating are not working. This is because the discourse of academic integrity that currently dominates is, on its own, inadequate for addressing the problem. We propose that in order for higher education institutions to challenge cheating effectively, they need…
Descriptors: Cheating, Student Behavior, Barriers, College Students
Forzano, Lori-Ann B.; Chelonis, John J.; Casey, Caitlin; Forward, Marion; Stachowiak, Jacqueline A.; Wood, Jennifer – Psychological Record, 2010
Self-control can be defined as the choice of a larger, more delayed reinforcer over a smaller, less delayed reinforcer, and impulsiveness as the opposite. Previous research suggests that exposure to visual food cues affects adult humans' self-control. Previous research also suggests that food deprivation decreases adult humans' self-control. The…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Disadvantaged Environment, Cues, Females
Peer reviewedSouheaver, Gary T.; Schuldt, W. John – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1978
Studied effects of suggestibility on performance within self- and external-control conditions. Subjects were assigned to experimental conditions--self-control, external-control, and no reward. Response rates of self and external groups were highest. Response rates of high-suggestibles in self-control conditions were not significantly different…
Descriptors: Behavior Rating Scales, College Students, Hypnosis, Locus of Control
Ellner, Melvyn; Bernstein, Arnold – 1973
Depressed and nondepressed college students were frustrated in an incentive task utilizing a nonreward technique. Matched controls undertook a similar task in which the frustration condition was absent. Subjects were 127 undergraduate psychology students. Pre- and post-test measures of hostility and depression were obtained. The Beck Depression…
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavior Patterns, College Students, Hostility
Paul, Gordon L – J Abnorm Psychol, 1969
Descriptors: Anxiety, Arousal Patterns, College Students, Hypnosis
Peer reviewedBartol, Geoffrey H.; Duerfeldt, Pryse H. – Journal of General Psychology, 1970
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, College Students
Peer reviewedShoham-Salomon, Varda; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1989
Examined two mechanisms of change under paradoxical interventions (reactance and increased sense of self-efficacy) with procrastinating college students (N=49 and N=58). Measured study time and perceived self-efficacy before and after treatment. Under paradoxical interventions, subjects higher on initial reactance benefited more from therapy than…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, College Students, Counseling Techniques, Higher Education
Dienstbier, Richard A. – 1975
Cheating behavior has been found to relate to emotion-attribution explanations. Prior research with second-grade children has indicated that increased self-control occurs in a watching task when the child's emotional response is attributed to internal rather than external actions. In the present study, freshman women (N=221) took a reading…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Cheating, College Students
Nicoletti, John A., Jr. – 1972
This report discusses the success of desensitization techniques in alleviating specific anxiety but its failure in treating generalized anxiety. Anxiety management training (AMTO has been developed to overcome some of the deficiencies of desensitization approaches. Through the use of instructions and cues to arouse anxiety responses and the…
Descriptors: Anxiety, College Students, Conditioning, Counselors
PDF pending restorationVinson, Michael L. – 1980
The effect on anxiety of a behaviorally-oriented treatment, Anxiety Management Training (AMT), was investigated with a sample of college students (N=23). The treatment was based upon the techniques originally used by Richardson, Suinn, and Meichenbaum, and consisted of three principal elements: relaxation training, cognitive-restructuring, and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anxiety, Behavior Change, Behavior Modification

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