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Van Stockum, Charles A., Jr.; DeCaro, Marci S. – Journal of Problem Solving, 2014
Individual differences in working memory capacity (WMC) increase the ability and tendency to devote greater attentional control to a task--improving performance on a wide range of skills. In addition, recent research on enclothed cognition demonstrates that the situational influence of wearing a white lab coat increases controlled attention, due…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Short Term Memory, Attention Control, Intuition
Lee, HwaYoung; Beretvas, S. Natasha – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2014
Conventional differential item functioning (DIF) detection methods (e.g., the Mantel-Haenszel test) can be used to detect DIF only across observed groups, such as gender or ethnicity. However, research has found that DIF is not typically fully explained by an observed variable. True sources of DIF may include unobserved, latent variables, such as…
Descriptors: Item Analysis, Factor Structure, Bayesian Statistics, Goodness of Fit
Muñoz, Karla; Noguez, Julieta; Neri, Luis; Mc Kevitt, Paul; Lunney, Tom – Educational Technology & Society, 2016
Game-based Learning (GBL) environments make instruction flexible and interactive. Positive experiences depend on personalization. Student modelling has focused on affect. Three methods are used: (1) recognizing the physiological effects of emotion, (2) reasoning about emotion from its origin and (3) an approach combining 1 and 2. These have proven…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Psychological Patterns, Models, Academic Achievement
Timmons, Kristy; Pelletier, Janette – Early Child Development and Care, 2016
In this study, we explored the influence of kindergarten children's perspectives of school on their literacy and self-regulation outcomes. Children's early perspectives were captured in a three-question, finger-puppet interview. Responses to the interview questions were coded thematically as being academic and/or social in nature, and were…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Kindergarten, Longitudinal Studies, Puppetry
Najafabadi, Maryam Omidi; Zamani, Maryam; Mirdamadi, Mehdi – Journal of Education for Business, 2016
The authors used Ajzen's theory of planned behavior and Shapero's entrepreneurial event model as well as entrepreneurial cognition theory to identify the relationship among entrepreneurial skills, self-efficacy, attitudes toward entrepreneurship, psychological traits, social norms, perceived desirability, social support, and entrepreneurial…
Descriptors: Models, Entrepreneurship, Agricultural Education, Intention
Liu, Ran; Koedinger, Kenneth R. K – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2017
Research in Educational Data Mining could benefit from greater efforts to ensure that models yield reliable, valid, and interpretable parameter estimates. These efforts have especially been lacking for individualized student-parameter models. We collected two datasets from a sizable student population with excellent "depth" -- that is,…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Bayesian Statistics, Pretests Posttests
Brown, Dannie L. – Industry and Higher Education, 2015
The purpose of this research was to assess students' expectations of future job satisfaction. Data were collected from 484 students enrolled in the BBA programme at Cape Breton University, Nova Scotia, Canada. Locke's job satisfaction theory and Hackman and Oldham's job characteristics model provided the theoretical foundation for the study.…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Expectation, Cohort Analysis, Cultural Differences
Balasooriya, Uditha; Li, Jackie; Low, Chan Kee – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2012
For any density function (or probability function), there always corresponds a "cumulative distribution function" (cdf). It is a well-known mathematical fact that the cdf is more general than the density function, in the sense that for a given distribution the former may exist without the existence of the latter. Nevertheless, while the…
Descriptors: Computation, Probability, Mathematics, Mathematics Curriculum
Culbertson, Jennifer; Smolensky, Paul – Cognitive Science, 2012
In this article, we develop a hierarchical Bayesian model of learning in a general type of artificial language-learning experiment in which learners are exposed to a mixture of grammars representing the variation present in real learners' input, particularly at times of language change. The modeling goal is to formalize and quantify hypothesized…
Descriptors: Models, Bayesian Statistics, Artificial Languages, Language Acquisition
Mossman, Douglas; Wygant, Dustin B.; Gervais, Roger O. – Psychological Assessment, 2012
Psychologists frequently use symptom validity tests (SVTs) to help determine whether evaluees' test performance or reported symptoms accurately represent their true functioning and capability. Most studies evaluating the accuracy of SVTs have used either known-group comparisons or simulation designs, but these approaches have well-known…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Classification, Validity, Psychological Testing
Ahern, David C.; Bridges, Ana J.; Faust, David – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2012
Our series of three chapters (Faust, Bridges, & Ahern, 2009a, 2009b; Bridges, Faust, & Ahern, 2009) on the methodology of identifying sexually abused children elicited a number of comments, both supportive and critical. The criticisms appear related to three primary issues or apparent misconceptions of our work, perhaps due in part to incomplete…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Misconceptions, Sexual Abuse, Identification
DeMars, Christine E. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2012
A testlet is a cluster of items that share a common passage, scenario, or other context. These items might measure something in common beyond the trait measured by the test as a whole; if so, the model for the item responses should allow for this testlet trait. But modeling testlet effects that are negligible makes the model unnecessarily…
Descriptors: Test Items, Item Response Theory, Comparative Analysis, Models
van de Schoot, Rens; Hoijtink, Herbert; Hallquist, Michael N.; Boelen, Paul A. – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2012
Researchers in the behavioral and social sciences often have expectations that can be expressed in the form of inequality constraints among the parameters of a structural equation model resulting in an informative hypothesis. The questions they would like an answer to are "Is the hypothesis Correct" or "Is the hypothesis…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Structural Equation Models, Hypothesis Testing, Computer Software
Zwick, Rebecca; Ye, Lei; Isham, Steven – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2012
This study demonstrates how the stability of Mantel-Haenszel (MH) DIF (differential item functioning) methods can be improved by integrating information across multiple test administrations using Bayesian updating (BU). The authors conducted a simulation that showed that this approach, which is based on earlier work by Zwick, Thayer, and Lewis,…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Computation, Statistical Analysis, Bayesian Statistics
Jordan, Pascal; Spiess, Martin – Psychometrika, 2012
Maximum likelihood and Bayesian ability estimation in multidimensional item response models can lead to paradoxical results as proven by Hooker, Finkelman, and Schwartzman ("Psychometrika" 74(3): 419-442, 2009): Changing a correct response on one item into an incorrect response may produce a higher ability estimate in one dimension.…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Statistical Analysis, Factor Analysis, Generalization

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