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Camilleri, Adrian R.; Sah, Sunita – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
The status quo bias (SQB) is the tendency to prefer the current state of affairs. We investigated if experts (physicians) fall prey to the SQB when making decisions in their area of expertise and, if so, whether the SQB is reduced or amplified for experts compared to non-experts. We presented 302 physicians and 733 members of the general…
Descriptors: Bias, Physicians, Decision Making, Medical Services
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Lockamyeir, Robert F.; Carlson, Curt A.; Jones, Alyssa R.; Wooten, Alex R.; Carlson, Maria A.; Hemby, Jacob A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Most eyewitness identification research simulates single perpetrator crimes, but real-world crimes often transpire at the hands of multiple perpetrators. It is unclear how multiple perpetrators might impact the ability of eyewitnesses to discriminate between the guilty and innocent. To address this issue, we conducted two experiments in which…
Descriptors: Crime, Criminals, Identification, Audiences
Max Collins – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Augmented Reality (AR) is a medium that gives people the ability to engage with digital information in ways that deviate from more traditional HCI methods (e.g. WIMP user interfaces (Christensson, 2014)). Previous work has shown that AR has useful implications for collaboration, and with remote work experiences and teleconferencing becoming…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Cooperation, Vignettes, Visualization
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Xingfeng Huang; Rongjin Huang; Charlotte Krog Skott – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2024
This study aims to explore how a research-informed product, a hypothetical learning trajectory (HLT), was implemented by a group of Shanghai teachers in mathematics classrooms and promoted by a researcher through a Chinese lesson study. The instruction informed by the HLT served as a boundary object to promote conversations between the researcher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Teachers, Learning Trajectories, Vignettes
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Darrell Townshend – International Journal of Music Education, 2024
Musician-teacher identity is a "work-in-progress" spanning a career lifetime, yet little research appears to explore how this culminative development occurs, particularly from an individualized musician-teacher viewpoint. Using a qualitative epistemology, the author examines autoethnographic vignettes of life experience to highlight how…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Music Education, Music Teachers
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Juliano Borba; Michelle Bonatti; Leonardo Medina; Katharina Löhr; Crystal Tremblay; Jutta Gutberlet; Stefan Sieber – Journal of Adult and Continuing Education, 2024
Considering the projected impacts of climate change in upcoming decades, innovative educational approaches should encourage inventive problem-solving techniques and societal change, fostering transformative climate adaptation. The value of drama in climate adaptation education remains a novel area in the environmental education research literature…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Drama, Socialization
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Anna Laura McAfee; Aftynne E. Cheek; Maddy Hensch; Lexi Stone – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2024
Self-determination consists of essential skills for students with disabilities because it gives individuals the power to make decisions based on their own needs and desires. Self-determination includes areas such as choice-making, goal setting, and self-directed learning. Music therapy is a service that can be used to enhance self-determination…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Self Determination, Cooperation, Partnerships in Education
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Song, Caini; Yao, Libo; Chen, Huisu; Liu, Lihua – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
Objective: To analyze the research hotspots and trends of nursing scenario simulation teaching at home and abroad, and to provide reference for future nursing talent education. Methods: CNKI and Web of Science databases were searched. From the establishment of the database to April 2022, relevant literature on nursing scenario simulation teaching…
Descriptors: Nursing, Nursing Education, Educational Trends, Teaching Methods
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Wang, Pauline; Tipton-Fisler, Leigh Ann; Phung, Janice N. – Contemporary School Psychology, 2023
Research on attitudes toward college students with high-functioning autism (HFA) in college settings produced mixed findings. This study builds on prior research by examining the affective and cognitive attitudes toward vignette characters with and without an autism label. Students from two public Southern California Universities (n = 712)…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Attitudes, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Sprecher, Susan – College Teaching, 2023
Many departments in colleges and universities require a capstone course that involves the students conducting a research project. This author has had over 20 years of experience teaching such a capstone course and describes a flexible research method for student research projects -- the vignette study (an experiment embedded in a survey). She also…
Descriptors: Vignettes, Teaching Methods, Capstone Experiences, Supplementary Education
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Sojot, Amy N. – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
Instead of seeking the slick aesthetics of consumer-friendly creative stories, this paper ventures to the sublime of the incomprehensible and invites us to look into the abyss of education's possibilities. Drawing inspiration from Jeff Vandermeer's 2017 novel, "Borne," and filmmaker David Cronenberg's aesthetic, this paper aims to tell a…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, Creativity
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Maša Popovac; Aneel Singh Gill; Layla H. Austin; Rufaro Maposa – International Journal of Bullying Prevention, 2023
Cyberbullying research focuses largely on children and adolescents. Relatively little is known about cyberbullying among adults, particularly their perceived severity and likelihood of intervening in different cyberbullying acts. This research presents two studies that aimed to address these gaps. Utilizing Willard's (2007) classification, study 1…
Descriptors: Intervention, Computer Mediated Communication, Bullying, Adults
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Sreya Mallipeddi; Cheryl L. Dickter; Joshua A. Burk – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
Purpose: Research has demonstrated that neurotypical college students view their autistic peers more negatively than their neurotypical peers and endorse stereotypes related to autism. One way to improve attitudes towards autistic individuals is to induce vicarious intergroup contact through the media in which seeing the lived experiences of an…
Descriptors: College Students, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Student Attitudes, Labeling (of Persons)
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Shari Sabeti – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
What constitutes 'teacher identity' and 'artist identity' have received considerable scholarly attention but there has been little exploration of how these identities intersect in the practice of 'teaching artists'. This article argues that paying close attention to that practice, as well as the artist's own perspectives and reflections on it,…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Artists, Professional Identity, Teacher Workshops
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Biggs, Adam T. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Inhibitory control has been identified as a prominent factor in shoot/don't-shoot errors. Although emerging evidence continues to support this relationship, there is critical nuance and depth that can significantly alter this connection between a cognitive capability and a critical real-world application. For example, presenting shoot/don't-shoot…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Self Control, Decision Making, Cognitive Processes
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