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Lorenz Weise – Metacognition and Learning, 2025
Humans often have an intuitive sense of whether they made the right decision or not -- our sense of confidence. In studies on metacognitive faculties, confidence is most often assessed explicitly, by asking participants how confident they are in their response being correct. While we can explicitly report our confidence, implicit methods of…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Metacognition, Accuracy, Task Analysis
Ran Ding; Bo Yang; Xiaolin Mei; Tingni Li – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
When people are working on creative tasks, they make progress in conscious thought (CT) and unconscious thought (UT) processes. UT occurs outside conscious awareness, and unlike CT, it is independent of working memory resources. Previous studies suggest UT is more influential under certain conditions, known as the UT effect. Typically, these…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creativity, Creative Thinking, Task Analysis
Dunn-Jensen, Linda M.; Ryan, Katherine C.; Bradshaw, Christopher C. – Management Teaching Review, 2023
Individuals who are privileged are often unaware of the unearned advantages that they have. Because of this lack of awareness, individuals with privilege may attribute poor performance of a non-privileged individual to that individual's lack of effort or ability, rather than recognizing that the non-privileged person may not have had sufficient…
Descriptors: Resource Allocation, Rewards, Advantaged, Diversity
Cohen, Anna-Lisa; Goldberg, Chaim; Mintz, Jonathan; Shavalian, Elliot – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
"Narrative transportation" is a state of total immersion that arises when one becomes engaged in a story. In Cohen et al. (2015), participants viewed a suspenseful film either with order of scenes intact or scrambled (out of chronological order). Participants had to remember to raise their hand every time they heard a film character say…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Films, Cognitive Processes, Incentives
Ikenna Osakwe; Guanliang Chen; Yizhou Fan; Mladen Rakovic; Shaveen Singh; Lyn Lim; Joep van der Graaf; Johanna Moore; Inge Molenaar; Maria Bannert; Alex Whitelock-Wainwright; Dragan Gaševic – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2024
Self-regulated learning (SRL) is an essential skill to achieve one's learning goals. This is particularly true for online learning environments (OLEs) where the support system is often limited compared to a traditional classroom setting. Likewise, existing research has found that learners often struggle to adapt their behaviour to the…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Learning Strategies, Teaching Methods, Classroom Environment
Ji Young Kim; Daniel M. Fienup; Derek D. Reed; Laudan B. Jahromi – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2024
Delay discounting tasks measure the relation between reinforcer delay and efficacy. The present study established the association between delay discounting and classroom behavior and introduced a brief measure quantifying sensitivity to reward delays for school-aged children. Study 1 reanalyzed data collected by Reed and Martens (J Appl Behav Anal…
Descriptors: Rewards, Classroom Techniques, Child Behavior, Correlation
Hellerstedt, Robin; Talmi, Deborah – Learning & Memory, 2022
Reward is thought to attenuate forgetting through the automatic effect of dopamine on hippocampal memory traces. Here we report a conceptual replication of previous results where we did not observe this effect of reward. Participants encoded eight lists of pictures and recalled picture content immediately or the next day. They were informed that…
Descriptors: Rewards, Recall (Psychology), Brain Hemisphere Functions, Memory
Sherlyn Narsolis – Online Submission, 2025
This classroom-based action research explored the influence of creative engagement strategies-- a combination of Participation Squares and Spin-the-Wheel--on enhancing student engagement in a middle school classroom. The study was motivated by a recurring issue of poor student engagement. The intervention, used as a class starter to boost student…
Descriptors: Intervention, Middle School Students, Learner Engagement, Self Esteem
Brimbal, L.; Crossman, A. M. – Journal of Moral Education, 2023
Adults deliver mixed messages to children about the acceptability of truth- and lie-telling across contexts. To probe this discrepancy, we investigated how adults evaluate children's truths and lies across various situations. Participants watched videos of children telling prosocial lies or hurtful truths that varied in their directness (blunt or…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Values, Deception, Video Technology
Liao, Ming-Ray; Anderson, Brian A. – Learning & Memory, 2020
Previously reward-associated stimuli persistently capture attention. We attempted to extinguish this attentional bias through a reversal learning procedure where the high-value color changed unexpectedly. Attentional priority shifted during training in favor of the currently high-value color, although a residual bias toward the original high-value…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Rewards, Color, Task Analysis
Zhuang, Winnie; Niebaum, Jesse; Munakata, Yuko – Developmental Psychology, 2023
When making decisions, the amount of time remaining matters. When time horizons are long, exploring unknown options can inform later decisions, but when time horizons are short, exploiting known options should be prioritized. While adults and adolescents adapt their exploration in this way, it is unclear when such adaptation emerges and how…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Preschool Children, College Students, Developmental Stages
Bergstrom, Hadley C.; Lieberman, Abby G.; Graybeal, Carolyn; Lipkin, Anna M.; Holmes, Andrew – Learning & Memory, 2020
Most experimental preparations demonstrate a role for dorsolateral striatum (DLS) in stimulus-response, but not outcome-based, learning. Here, we assessed DLS involvement in a touchscreen-based reversal task requiring mice to update choice following a change in stimulus-reward contingencies. In vivo single-unit recordings in the DLS showed…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Stimuli, Responses, Learning Processes
Sathiyakumar, Sankirthana; Carrasco, Sofia Skromne; Saad, Lydia; Richards, Blake A. – Learning & Memory, 2020
Behavioral flexibility is important in a changing environment. Previous research suggests that systems consolidation, a long-term poststorage process that alters memory traces, may reduce behavioral flexibility. However, exactly how systems consolidation affects flexibility is unknown. Here, we tested how systems consolidation affects: (1)…
Descriptors: Memory, Animals, Rewards, Food
Reactivation of Learned Reward Association Reduces Retroactive Interference from New Reward Learning
Huang, Zhibang; Li, Sheng – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Learning to associate specific objects with value contributes to the human's adaptive behavior. However, the intrinsic nature of associative memory posits a challenge that newly learned associations may interfere with the old ones if they share common features (e.g., a reward). In the present study, we conducted a set of behavioral experiments and…
Descriptors: Rewards, Interference (Learning), Associative Learning, Memory
Kim, Ji Young; Fienup, Daniel M. – Journal of Special Education, 2022
During the COVID-19 pandemic, there were alarming reports of children missing out on online special educational activities due to a lack of access to those resources. We evaluated a simple online intervention using a concurrent multiple baseline design for three second-grade students with disabilities who unreliably accessed the remote curriculum.…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Online Courses, Distance Education, Electronic Learning

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