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James Drimalla – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
Inferentialism has emerged as a valuable theoretical resource in mathematics education. As a theory of meaning about the use and content of concepts, it offers a fresh perspective on traditional epistemological and linguistic questions in the field. Despite its emergence, important inferentialist ideas still need to be operationalized. In this…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematical Concepts, Inferences, Statistical Inference
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Kenneth Frank; Qinyun Lin; Spiro Maroulis; Shimeng Dai, Contributor; Nicole Jess, Contributor; Hung-Chang Lin, Contributor; Yuqing Liu, Contributor; Sarah Maestrales, Contributor; Ellen Searle, Contributor; Jordan Tait, Contributor – Grantee Submission, 2025
Sensitivity analyses can inform evidence-based education policy by quantifying the hypothetical conditions necessary to change an inference. Perhaps the most prevalent index used for sensitivity analyses is Oster's (2019) Coefficient of Proportionality (COP). Oster's COP leverages changes in estimated effects and R[superscript 2] when observed…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Correlation, Predictor Variables, Inferences
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Rosie Aboody; Caiqin Zhou; Julian Jara-Ettinger – Child Development, 2025
As adults, we do not expect ignorant agents to behave randomly or always get things wrong. Instead, we expect them to act reasonably, guided by past experiences. We test whether 4-to-6-year-olds share this intuition and use it to infer others' knowledge, or whether they rely on a simple "ignorance = error" heuristic identified in past…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Expectation, Young Children, Inferences
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Sarah E. Robertson; Jon A. Steingrimsson; Issa J. Dahabreh – Evaluation Review, 2024
When planning a cluster randomized trial, evaluators often have access to an enumerated cohort representing the target population of clusters. Practicalities of conducting the trial, such as the need to oversample clusters with certain characteristics in order to improve trial economy or support inferences about subgroups of clusters, may preclude…
Descriptors: Randomized Controlled Trials, Generalization, Inferences, Hierarchical Linear Modeling
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Luis Eduardo Muñoz Guerrero; Yony Fernando Ceballos; Luis David Trejos Rojas – Contemporary Educational Technology, 2025
Recent progress made in conversational AI lays emphasis on the need for development of language models that possess solid logical reasoning skills and further extrapolated capabilities. An examination into this phenomenon investigates how well the Capybara dataset can improve one's ability to reason using language-based systems. Multiple…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Logical Thinking, Models, Natural Language Processing
James Drimalla – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This theoretical, methodological, and empirical networking study investigated the potential of inferentialism to contribute to the study of meaning and collective argumentation in mathematics. I carefully attended to my worldview and explicated my philosophical process for identifying inferentialism as my theory of choice. I then drew on Prediger…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Inferences, Constructivism (Learning), Epistemology
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Moshe Poliak; Rachel Ryskin; Mika Braginsky; Edward Gibson – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Under the noisy-channel framework of language comprehension, comprehenders infer the speaker's intended meaning by integrating the perceived utterance with their knowledge of the language, the world, and the kinds of errors that can occur in communication. Previous research has shown that, when sentences are improbable under the meaning prior…
Descriptors: Russian, Ambiguity (Semantics), Sentence Structure, Inferences
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Kylie Anglin; Qing Liu; Vivian C. Wong – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2024
Given decision-makers often prioritize causal research that identifies the impact of treatments on the people they serve, a key question in education research is, "Does it work?". Today, however, researchers are paying increasing attention to successive questions that are equally important from a practical standpoint--not only does it…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Program Evaluation, Validity, Classification
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Stavroula Saplamidou; Charalampos Sakonidis – Statistics Education Research Journal, 2025
This paper reports on a study concerning the social nature of young students' informal inferential reasoning. Employing inferentialism as a background theory, we examine cognitive and sociocultural aspects of reasoning that arose during group discussions as well as trace relations between those aspects. Following a design experiment approach, we…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Grade 2, Cognitive Processes, Sociocultural Patterns
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Gudrun Schwarzer; Bianca Jovanovic – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
The ability to predict upcoming events is essential in infancy because it enables babies to process information optimally and have successful goal-directed interactions with their environment. In this article, we examine how infants generate predictions in perception, cognition, and action, and address whether and how their predictions are…
Descriptors: Infants, Motor Development, Prediction, Cognitive Processes
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Jacqueline Raymond; David Wei Dai; Sue McAllister – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2025
There is increasing interest in health professions education (HPE) in applying argument-based validity approaches, such as Kane's, to assessment design. The critical first step in employing Kane's approach is to specify the interpretation-use argument (IUA). However, in the HPE literature, this step is often poorly articulated. This article…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Test Interpretation, Test Construction, Inferences
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Laura Schlingloff-Nemecz; Maayan Stavans; Barbu Revencu; Kazuhide Hashiya; Hiromi Kobayashi; Gergely Csibra – Child Development, 2025
A series of experiments conducted in Central Europe (Hungary, Austria) and East Asia (Japan) probed whether 5- to 10-year-old children (n = 436, 213 female) and adults (n = 71, 43 female; all data collected between July 2020 and May 2023) would infer traits and choose partners accordingly, in a novel touchscreen game. The participants observed…
Descriptors: Children, Inferences, Computer Games, Animation
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Peter Ling – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This paper is a philosophical piece relating to an issue in education theory: what is the epistemological nature of the product of education research and what are the consequences for the reporting of findings and conclusions in particular, what form of contribution to knowledge and/or understanding can emerge from education research? Education…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Alignment (Education), Epistemology, Models
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Yuan Xie; Peng Zhou; Sergey Avrutin; Peter Coopmans – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2025
Children's knowledge of referential dependency involved in the interpretation of reflexives has been investigated mainly from a purely syntactic perspective. However, syntax alone is insufficient to account for various kinds of referential dependencies, as many of them require discourse interpretations. To fill this gap, the present study…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Mandarin Chinese, Syntax, Inferences
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Kirsten H. Blakey; Eva Rafetseder; Giacomo Melis; Ariane Veit; Kea Amelung; Franziska Freudensprung; Kinga Kovacs; Zsófia Virányi – Child Development, 2025
Some philosophers argue that reflection is key to rational thinking. By tying reflective thinking to language, they struggle to account for minimally verbal infants and exclude nonhuman animals. This study assessed processing of undermining defeaters--a basic form of reflective thinking--in 36 two-year-old British children (13 female; M[subscript…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Cognitive Processes, Reflection, Thinking Skills
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