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Rhoades, Brittany L.; Greenberg, Mark T.; Lanza, Stephanie T.; Blair, Clancy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Executive function (EF) skills are integral components of young children's growing competence, but little is known about the role of early family context and experiences in their development. We examined how demographic and familial risks during infancy predicted EF competence at 36 months of age in a large, predominantly low-income sample of…
Descriptors: Income, Infants, Risk, Parent Child Relationship
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Daloz, Laurent A. Parks – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2011
There is both gain and loss in early male formation: men gain a certain clarity, power, and even vision in their separateness, yet may pay the cost in mutuality, responsiveness, and connectedness. Mentors can help men heal their connectivity deficit while retaining the strengths of their distinctiveness by reminding them that they have within…
Descriptors: Males, Masculinity, Mentors, Interpersonal Relationship
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Hughes, Jamie S.; Gourley, Mary K.; Madson, Laura; Le Blanc, Katya – Teaching of Psychology, 2011
Stress management and coping techniques are not only relevant in many psychology courses but also personally relevant for undergraduate students. In this article, the authors describe an activity designed to provide students with practice evaluating and challenging negative self-talk. Students responded to scenarios individually, were paired with…
Descriptors: Stress Management, Undergraduate Students, Negative Attitudes, Coping
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Liu, Dong; Fu, Ping-ping – Journal of Applied Psychology, 2011
This study examined the roles of 3 multilevel motivational predictors in proteges' personal learning in teams: an autonomy-supportive team climate, mentors' autonomy support, and proteges' autonomy orientation. The authors followed 305 proteges in 58 teams for 12 weeks and found that all 3 predictors were positively related to the proteges'…
Descriptors: Mentors, Teamwork, Cognitive Processes, Predictor Variables
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Howell, Penny B.; Thomas, Shelley; Ardasheva, Yuliya – Middle Grades Research Journal, 2011
Adolescent learning is a complex process, distinctive from learning prior to and after this stage because of the connection between learning and the physical, intellectual, emotional, and social development of students in this age group. Indeed, questions about middle school learning examine both "what" and "how" they learn (Gross, 2002). This…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Age, Student Attitudes, Social Development
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Allwood, Maureen A.; Bell, Debora J.; Horan, Jacqueline – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2011
This study elaborated on associations between youth's trauma-related emotional numbing across multiple affective domains (e.g., fear, sadness, happiness, anger) and delinquent behaviors. The study also examined whether the effects of posttrauma emotional numbing varied by the occurrence of posttrauma arousal symptoms. Participants were 123 middle…
Descriptors: Delinquency, Early Adolescents, Fear, Adolescents
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Dixon, Raymond A. – Journal of STEM Teacher Education, 2011
This exploratory study highlights certain differences in the way an expert and a novice engineer used their analyzing and generating skills while solving a fairly ill-structured design problem. The expert tends to use more inferences and elaboration when solving the design problem and the novice tend to use analysis that is focused on the…
Descriptors: Expertise, Internet, Inferences, Thinking Skills
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Chakravarti, Amitav; Fang, Christina; Shapira, Zur – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
The ability to detect a change, to accurately assess the magnitude of the change, and to react to that change in a commensurate fashion are of critical importance in many decision domains. Thus, it is important to understand the factors that systematically affect people's reactions to change. In this article we document a novel effect: Decision…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Change, Responses, Decision Making Skills
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Guest, Duncan; Lamberts, Koen – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
It is well established that visual search becomes harder when the similarity between target and distractors is increased and the similarity between distractors is decreased. However, in models of visual search, similarity is typically treated as a static, time-invariant property of the relation between objects. Data from other perceptual tasks…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Children, Models, Experiments
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Carcagno, Samuele; Semal, Catherine; Demany, Laurent – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Previous psychophysical work provided evidence for the existence of automatic frequency-shift detectors (FSDs) that establish perceptual links between successive sounds. In this study, we investigated the characteristics of the FSDs with respect to the binaural system. Listeners were presented with sound sequences consisting of a chord of pure…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Human Body, Task Analysis, Hearing (Physiology)
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Granier-Deferre, Carolyn; Ribeiro, Aurelie; Jacquet, Anne-Yvonne; Bassereau, Sophie – Developmental Science, 2011
The perception of speech and music requires processing of variations in spectra and amplitude over different time intervals. Near-term fetuses can discriminate acoustic features, such as frequencies and spectra, but whether they can process complex auditory streams, such as speech sequences and more specifically their temporal variations, fast or…
Descriptors: Metabolism, Sentences, Intervals, Sleep
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Hebblethwaite, Amy; Jahoda, Andrew; Dagnan, Dave – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2011
Background: This study compares how people with and without intellectual disabilities talk about events, beliefs and emotions in dialogues about real-life, emotive events and in a structured task assessing understanding of cognitive mediation. Materials and Methods: A cognitive-emotive interview was used to assist 19 adults with intellectual…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Verbal Ability, Therapy, Correlation
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Batanova, Milena D.; Loukas, Alexandra – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2011
Guided by a social information processing perspective, this study examined the unique and interactive contributions of social anxiety and two distinct components of empathy, empathic concern and perspective taking, to subsequent relational and overt aggression in early adolescents. Participants were 485 10- to 14-year old middle school students…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Anxiety Disorders, Interpersonal Competence, Empathy
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Wood, Justin N. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Visual working memory (VWM) is widely thought to contain specialized buffers for retaining spatial and object information: a "spatial-object architecture." However, studies of adults, infants, and nonhuman animals show that visual cognition builds on core knowledge systems that retain more specialized representations: (1) spatiotemporal…
Descriptors: Evidence, Architecture, Infants, Short Term Memory
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Bruner, Emiliano; Martin-Loeches, Manuel; Burgaleta, Miguel; Colom, Roberto – Intelligence, 2011
Brain shape might influence cognitive performance because of the relationships between functions, spatial organization, and differential volumetric development of cortical areas. Here we analyze the relationships between midsagittal brain shape variation and a set of basic psychological measures. Coordinates in 2D from 102 MRI-scanned young adult…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Intelligence, Cognitive Tests, Young Adults
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