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Lewkowich, David – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2021
In activities usually referred to as "reflections" or "journaling," students in the process of learning to teach are frequently asked to reinhabit the memories of past educational experiences, whether from the vantage point of themselves as younger students or as student teachers. The idea here is that such contemplation will…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Memory, Reflection
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Applin, Jessica B.; Kibbe, Melissa M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
The ability to concurrently maintain representations of multiple objects and their locations in visual working memory is severely limited. Thus, making optimal use of visual working memory requires continual, moment-to-moment monitoring of its fidelity: High-fidelity representations can be relied upon, whereas incomplete or fuzzy representations…
Descriptors: Young Children, Visual Perception, Short Term Memory, Fidelity
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Benegas, Julio; Flores, Julio Sirur – Electronic Journal for Research in Science & Mathematics Education, 2021
This work proposes a new approach for measuring long-term conceptual knowledge based on the after-instruction evolution of students' answers to a research-based, multiple-choice, single-response test. The method allows for a quantitative determination of the fraction of students that, after instruction, attain long-lasting and temporary learnings,…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Multiple Choice Tests, Concept Formation, Instructional Effectiveness
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Lai, Chien-Hung; Jong, Bin-Shyan; Hsia, Yen-Teh; Lin, Tsong-Wuu – Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, 2021
Association questions (AQs) are a novel form of multiple-choice questions (MCQs). To answer an AQ, learners must recall the concepts denoted by the given terms, affirm their connections, and then select the term with a denotation that is "less connected" with other concepts. This research hypothesizes that the use of AQ tests for…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Retention (Psychology), Recall (Psychology), Associative Learning
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Ingram, Joanne; Hand, Christopher J.; Maciejewski, Greg – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Studies examining the effect of social isolation on cognitive function typically involve older adults and/or specialist groups (e.g., expeditions). We considered the effects of COVID-19-induced social isolation on cognitive function within a representative sample of the general population. We additionally considered how participants 'shielding'…
Descriptors: Social Isolation, COVID-19, Pandemics, Cognitive Processes
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Oechler, Christopher C. – Hispania, 2021
On the eighth of October, 1622, Lope de Vega finished "La nueva victoria de don Gonzalo de Córdoba." This "comedia" recounts a Spanish victory in the Battle of Fleurus, one of several military triumphs that encouraged hope and excitement during the early years of Philip IV's reign. The battle had occurred in late August of…
Descriptors: History, Spanish Literature, War, Drama
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Feldon, David F.; Litson, Kaylee – Educational Psychology Review, 2021
Working memory is an essential mechanism in the cognitive learning process. However, its definitions and mechanisms remain a topic of debate. Miller-Cotto and Byrnes ("Journal of Educational Psychology," "112"(5), 1074-1084, 2020) reported a comparison of three models of working memory to determine which best accounted for data…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Learning Processes, Models, Children
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Dames, Hannah; Pfeuffer, Christina U. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Post-error cognitive control processes are evident in post-error slowing (PES) and post-error increased accuracy (PIA). A recent theory (Wessel, 2018) proposes that post-error control disrupts not only ongoing motor activity but also current task-set representations, suggesting an interdependence of post-error control and memory. In 2 experiments,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Error Patterns, Accuracy, Inhibition
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Sosa, Jorge Jhonattan Castellanos; Aguilar, Francy Karina Maldonado – Journal of Research and Advances in Mathematics Education, 2021
This work shows how playing chess creates capacities in the student such as increasing visual memory. This helps to classify information in an orderly manner in the mind and contributes to a better understanding of geometric transformations such as displacements, turns and similarities. This was done with a mixed technique (Quantitative and…
Descriptors: Games, Memory, Visual Perception, Geometric Concepts
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Belletier, Clément; Camos, Valérie; Barrouillet, Pierre – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Several working memory (WM) theories assume a resource sharing between the maintenance of information and its processing, whereas other theories suppose that these 2 functions of WM rely on different pools of resources. Studies that addressed this question by examining whether dual-task costs occur in tasks combining processing and storage have…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Short Term Memory, Attention, Recall (Psychology)
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Yun, SunInn – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
This paper discusses the educational significance of the national museum as a reminder of the nature of home and its relation to nostalgia. I contextualise the sense of home in various ways. First, the national museum materialises the nostalgic claim of 'our' history, the collective memory and identity, which is in some way or other mixed up with…
Descriptors: History, Museums, Self Concept, Memory
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Saraiva, Pedro; Silva, Sara; Habermas, Tilmann; Henriques, Margarida R. – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2021
Autobiographical remembering develops in childhood. A late-developing cognitive tool is the cultural life script. The present study aimed at exploring the beginnings of its acquisition and at replicating its acquisition in early adolescence in a Southern-European culture. Study 1 established the Portuguese normative adult cultural life script,…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Autobiographies, Memory, Experience
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Chin Yang Shapland; Ellen Verhoef; George Davey Smith; Simon E. Fisher; Brad Verhulst; Philip S. Dale; Beate St Pourcain – npj Science of Learning, 2021
Several abilities outside literacy proper are associated with reading and spelling, both phenotypically and genetically, though our knowledge of multivariate genomic covariance structures is incomplete. Here, we introduce structural models describing genetic and residual influences between traits to study multivariate links across measures of…
Descriptors: Multivariate Analysis, Genetics, Literacy, Language Skills
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Anderson, Francis T.; Rummel, Jan; McDaniel, Mark A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
In prospective memory (PM) research, costs (slowed responding to the ongoing task when a PM task is present relative to when it is not) have typically been interpreted as implicating an attentionally demanding monitoring process. To inform this interpretation, Heathcote, Loft, and Remington (2015), using an accumulator model, found that PM-related…
Descriptors: Memory, Responses, Behavior, Cues
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Briskin-Luchinsky, Valeria; Tam, Shlomit; Shabbat, Schlomit; Hurwitz, Itay; Susswein, Abraham J. – Learning & Memory, 2018
A learning experience may lead to changes in behavior during the experience, and also to memory expressed at a later time. Are signals causing changes in behavior during the learning experience related to the formation and expression of memory? We examined this question, using learning that food is inedible in "Aplysia." Treatment of an…
Descriptors: Memory, Behavior Change, Animals, Food
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