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Xiang, Ming; Kramer, Alex; Nordmeyer, Ann E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
In sentence comprehension, negative sentences tend to elicit more processing cost than affirmative sentences. A growing body of work has shown that pragmatic context is an important factor that contributes to negation comprehension cost. The nature of this pragmatic effect, however, is yet to be determined. In 4 behavioral experiments, the current…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Sentences, Comprehension, Expectation
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Schut, Alice; Klapwijk, Remke; Gielen, Mathieu; van Doorn, Fenne; de Vries, Marc – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2020
In this paper, we explore the early indicators of design fixation occurring during the concept development stage of children's design processes. This type of fixation, which we named: "concept fixation," causes a blind adherence to the current (possibly unfavourable) state of a design idea. Its occurrence hampers the creative thinking…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Design, Concept Formation, Cognitive Processes
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Di, Xu – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
Consciousness is a natural and integral part of human beings that is at the core of our physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual functions throughout our lives. However, we tend to be too occupied with or distracted by the details of our daily existence to be fully aware of our own consciousness. More often than not, we are engaged in the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Well Being, Individual Development, Philosophy
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Horsthemke, Kai – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
Questions about the conscious, conative and cognitive life, as well as the status and treatment of other-than-animals have been receiving systematic consideration by philosophers for close to 50 years. It is all the more puzzling, then, that it is only in recent years that these issues have been addressed by educational philosophers and scholars…
Descriptors: Animals, Educational Philosophy, Cognitive Processes, Ethical Instruction
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Horchak, Oleksandr V.; Garrido, Margarida Vaz – Cognitive Science, 2020
Previous research showed that sensorimotor information affects the perception of properties associated with implied perceptual context during language comprehension. Three experiments addressed a novel question of whether perceptual context may contribute to a simulation of information about such out-of-sight objects as cast shadows. In Experiment…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Reading Comprehension, Reading Rate, Imagery
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Rüther, Johanna; Liszkowski, Ulf – Cognitive Science, 2020
Prelinguistic cognitive reference comprehension is foundational to language acquisition and higher cognitive functions. However, its ontogenetic origins in the first year of life are currently not well understood. The current study pitted cognitivist against social interactionist views. We worked with infants monthly from 10 to 13 months of age…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Comprehension
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Atteveldt, Nienke; Peters, Sabine; De Smedt, Bert; Dumontheil, Iroise – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2020
The special issue resulting from the 2018 Earli-SIG22 conference reflects the current state of the field, the diversity of methods, the persevering limitations and promising directions towards solutions. About half of the empirical papers in this special issue that consist of three parts, uses behavioral, self-report or qualitative measures to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Brain, Neurosciences, Educational Research
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Bontemps-Hommen, Marij C. M. M. L.; Baart, Andries J.; Vosman, Frans J. H. – Vocations and Learning, 2020
This article aims at investigating whether physicians can acquire and develop practical wisdom in their practices through structural case discussions focused on learning. Our starting point is that practical wisdom is essential to realize the moral purpose of professional care: to help each individual patient to alleviate her suffering and to…
Descriptors: Professional Education, Workplace Learning, Physicians, Hospitals
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Sundararajan, NarayanKripa; Adesope, Olusola – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
Studies have shown that learners exposed to interesting and irrelevant information, known as seductive details, do not perform as much as those who learned without seductive details. However, findings are mixed in terms of the degree to which seductive details hinder learning. Further research is also needed on how design features of learning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology), Barriers, Effect Size
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Laub, Ruth; Frings, Christian – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
If a target stimulus is presented together with a response-irrelevant distractor stimulus, both stimuli can be encoded together with the response in an event file (see Hommel, 2004). The repetition of any feature of such an event-file can then retrieve the previously encoded response. This kind of feature-based retrieval is an important mechanism…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Perception, Repetition
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Bacon, Alex; Beaman, C. Philip; Liu, Fang – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2020
Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) reportedly possess preserved or superior music-processing skills compared to their typically developing counterparts. We examined auditory imagery and earworms (tunes that get "stuck" in the head) in adults with ASD and controls. Both groups completed a short earworm questionnaire together…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Music, Auditory Perception
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Kim, Dan; Opfer, John E. – Developmental Psychology, 2020
Kim and Opfer (2017) found that number-line estimates increased approximately logarithmically with number when an upper bound (e.g., 100 or 1000) was explicitly marked (bounded condition) and when no upper bound was marked (unbounded condition). Using procedural suggestions from Cohen and Ray (2020), we examined whether this logarithmicity might…
Descriptors: Computation, Cognitive Development, Numbers, Cognitive Processes
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Jungic, Veselin; Yan, Xiaoheng – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2020
The aim of this article is to advise readers that natural numbers may be introduced as ordinal numbers or cardinal numbers and that there is an ongoing discussion about which come first. In addition, through several examples, the authors demonstrate that in the process of answering the question "How many?" one may, if convenient, use…
Descriptors: Number Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Cognitive Processes, Numbers
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Tawfik, Andrew A.; Graesser, Arthur; Gatewood, Jessica; Gishbaugher, Jaclyn – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2020
Many theories and models describe the various cognitive processes individuals engage in as they solve ill-structured problems. While diverse in perspectives, these theories and models uniformly agree that essential aspects of complex problem solving include iteration and inquiry. This paper further argues that an important yet overlooked component…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Taxonomy, Questioning Techniques
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Ashton, Jennifer E.; Harrington, Marcus O.; Langthorne, Diane; Ngo, Hong-Viet V.; Cairney, Scott A. – Learning & Memory, 2020
Sleep deprivation increases rates of forgetting in episodic memory. Yet, whether an extended lack of sleep alters the qualitative nature of forgetting is unknown. We compared forgetting of episodic memories across intervals of overnight sleep, daytime wakefulness, and overnight sleep deprivation. Item-level forgetting was amplified across daytime…
Descriptors: Sleep, Health Behavior, Memory, Neurological Impairments
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