Publication Date
| In 2026 | 4 |
| Since 2025 | 748 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 3828 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 7723 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 18037 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Sternberg, Robert J. | 75 |
| Swanson, H. Lee | 58 |
| Mayer, Richard E. | 51 |
| Sweller, John | 49 |
| Paas, Fred | 43 |
| Das, J. P. | 40 |
| Kalyuga, Slava | 40 |
| Anderson, John R. | 37 |
| Lawson, Anton E. | 34 |
| Naglieri, Jack A. | 31 |
| Gelman, Susan A. | 30 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 1737 |
| Researchers | 1483 |
| Teachers | 1237 |
| Administrators | 212 |
| Policymakers | 90 |
| Students | 62 |
| Parents | 41 |
| Counselors | 35 |
| Media Staff | 11 |
| Community | 8 |
| Support Staff | 3 |
| More ▼ | |
Location
| Australia | 510 |
| Canada | 404 |
| China | 396 |
| Germany | 388 |
| Turkey | 344 |
| United Kingdom | 270 |
| Netherlands | 236 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 209 |
| United States | 200 |
| Israel | 197 |
| Taiwan | 194 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 13 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 19 |
| Does not meet standards | 12 |
Oeberst, Aileen; Blank, Hartmut – Cognition, 2012
Presenting inconsistent postevent information about a witnessed incident typically decreases the accuracy of memory reports concerning that event (the "misinformation effect"). Surprisingly, the "reversibility" of the effect (after an initial occurrence) has remained largely unexplored. Based on a "memory conversion" theoretical framework and…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Memory, Models, Experiments
Aarts, Kristien; De Houwer, Jan; Pourtois, Gilles – Cognition, 2012
The accuracy of simple actions is swiftly determined through specific monitoring brain systems. However, it remains unclear whether this evaluation is accompanied by a rapid and compatible emotional appraisal of the action that allows to mark incorrect actions as negative/bad and conversely correct actions as positive/good. In this study, we used…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Anxiety, Cognitive Processes
Cassia, Viola Macchi; Picozzi, Marta; Girelli, Luisa; de Hevia, Maria Dolores – Cognition, 2012
While infants' ability to discriminate quantities has been extensively studied, showing that this competence is present even in neonates, the ability to compute ordinal relations between magnitudes has received much less attention. Here we show that the ability to represent ordinal information embedded in size-based sequences is apparent at 4…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cues, Neonates, Habituation
Sweeny, Timothy D.; Guzman-Martinez, Emmanuel; Ortega, Laura; Grabowecky, Marcia; Suzuki, Satoru – Cognition, 2012
While perceiving speech, people see mouth shapes that are systematically associated with sounds. In particular, a vertically stretched mouth produces a /woo/ sound, whereas a horizontally stretched mouth produces a /wee/ sound. We demonstrate that hearing these speech sounds alters how we see aspect ratio, a basic visual feature that contributes…
Descriptors: Television Viewing, Visual Perception, Auditory Perception, Geometric Concepts
Willis, Mariam – Parenting for High Potential, 2012
Empathy is the ability to understand and feel for the situation of another human being and is shaped by seeing others react when distressed; by imitating what they see, children develop a repertoire of empathic responses. When children see other people in pain, their brains become active in the same regions that process the experience of pain…
Descriptors: Gifted, Empathy, Emotional Development, Emotional Intelligence
Loucks, Jeff; Sommerville, Jessica A. – Child Development, 2012
Recent evidence suggests adults and infants selectively attend to features of action, such as how a hand contacts an object. The current research investigated whether this bias stems from infants' processing of the functional consequences of grasps: understanding that different grasps afford different future actions. A habituation paradigm…
Descriptors: Role, Psychomotor Skills, Infants, Visual Perception
van Ravenzwaaij, Don; van der Maas, Han L. J.; Wagenmakers, Eric-Jan – Psychological Review, 2012
In their influential "Psychological Review" article, Bogacz, Brown, Moehlis, Holmes, and Cohen (2006) discussed optimal decision making as accomplished by the drift diffusion model (DDM). The authors showed that neural inhibition models, such as the leaky competing accumulator model (LCA) and the feedforward inhibition model (FFI), can mimic the…
Descriptors: Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Inhibition, Bayesian Statistics, Decision Making
Brown, Benjamin T.; Morris, Gwynn; Nida, Robert E.; Baker-Ward, Lynne – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2012
The development of the personal past is complex, requiring the operation of multiple components of cognitive and social functioning. Because many of these components are affected by autism spectrum disorders, it is likely that autobiographical memory in children with Asperger's Disorder (AD) will be impaired. We predicted that the memory…
Descriptors: Autism, Asperger Syndrome, Memory, Children
Bornkessel-Schlesewsky, Ina; Grewe, Tanja; Schlesewsky, Matthias – Brain and Language, 2012
Prior research on the neural bases of syntactic comprehension suggests that activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus (lIFG) correlates with the processing of word order variations. However, there are inconsistencies with respect to the specific subregion within the IFG that is implicated by these findings: the pars opercularis or the pars…
Descriptors: Sentences, Word Order, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Organization
Bailey, Kate; Chapman, Peter – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Emotionally arousing information is treated in a specialised manner across a number of different processing stages, and memory for affective events is often found to be heightened by virtue of this. However, in some cases, emotional experiences might be the very ones that we would like to forget. Here, two item-method directed forgetting studies…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diagnostic Tests
Bayer, Ulrike; Hausmann, Markus – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Fluctuating sex hormone levels during the menstrual cycle have been shown to affect functional cerebral asymmetries in cognitive domains. These effects seem to result from the neuromodulatory properties of sex hormones and their metabolites on interhemispheric processing. The present study was carried out to investigate whether functional cerebral…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Differences, Physiology, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Zimmermann, Gregoire; Mahaim, Elodie Biermann; Mantzouranis, Gregory; Genoud, Philippe A.; Crocetti, Elisabetta – Journal of Adolescence, 2012
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the factor structure and the reliability of the French versions of the Identity Style Inventory (ISI-3) and the Utrecht-Management of Identity Commitments Scale (U-MICS) in a sample of college students (N = 457, 18-25 years old). Confirmatory factor analyses confirmed the hypothesized three-factor solution…
Descriptors: Validity, Factor Structure, Measures (Individuals), French
Mevorach, Miriam; Strauss, Sidney – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2012
In previous studies on teachers' cognition, we discovered that teachers' teaching can be described via a general in-action mental model (IAMM) concerning the structure of the mind and the roles of teaching in fostering children's learning. The purpose of our study was to examine teacher educators' IAMM regarding student teachers' minds and…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Student Teachers, Teacher Supervision, College Instruction
ViSA: A Neurodynamic Model for Visuo-Spatial Working Memory, Attentional Blink, and Conscious Access
Simione, Luca; Raffone, Antonino; Wolters, Gezinus; Salmas, Paola; Nakatani, Chie; Belardinelli, Marta Olivetti; van Leeuwen, Cees – Psychological Review, 2012
Two separate lines of study have clarified the role of selectivity in conscious access to visual information. Both involve presenting multiple targets and distracters: one "simultaneously" in a spatially distributed fashion, the other "sequentially" at a single location. To understand their findings in a unified framework, we propose a…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Visual Perception, Spatial Ability, Eye Movements
Cassia, Viola Macchi; Pisacane, Antonella; Gava, Lucia – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
This study aimed to investigate the presence of an own-age bias in young children who accumulated different amounts of early experience with child faces. Discrimination abilities for upright and inverted adult and child faces were tested using a delayed two-alternative, forced-choice matching-to-sample task in two groups of 3-year-old children,…
Descriptors: Evidence, Siblings, Early Experience, Young Children

Peer reviewed
Direct link
