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Showing 16 to 30 of 34 results Save | Export
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Sanborn, Adam N.; Mansinghka, Vikash K.; Griffiths, Thomas L. – Psychological Review, 2013
People have strong intuitions about the influence objects exert upon one another when they collide. Because people's judgments appear to deviate from Newtonian mechanics, psychologists have suggested that people depend on a variety of task-specific heuristics. This leaves open the question of how these heuristics could be chosen, and how to…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Statistical Inference, Mechanics (Physics), Intuition
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Barrouillet, Pierre – Developmental Review, 2011
Dual-process theories have become increasingly influential in the psychology of reasoning. Though the distinction they introduced between intuitive and reflective thinking should have strong developmental implications, the developmental approach has rarely been used to refine or test these theories. In this article, I review several contemporary…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Piagetian Theory, Thinking Skills, Theories
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Lundegard, Iann; Hamza, Karim M. – Science Education, 2014
This article addresses the problem of treating generalizations of human activity as entities and structures that ultimately explain the activities from which they were initially drawn. This is problematic because it involves a circular reasoning leading to unwarranted claims explaining the originally studied activities of science teaching and…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Research, Generalization, Heuristics
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Sorsana, Christine; Trognon, Alain – Human Development, 2011
This theoretical paper discusses some conceptual and methodological obstacles that one encounters when analyzing the contextual determination of thinking in psychology. First, we comment upon the various representations of the "cognitive" individual that have been formed over the years--from the epistemic subject to the psychological subject, and…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Barriers, Research Methodology, Cognitive Processes
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Griffiths, Thomas L.; Tenenbaum, Joshua B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2011
Predicting the future is a basic problem that people have to solve every day and a component of planning, decision making, memory, and causal reasoning. In this article, we present 5 experiments testing a Bayesian model of predicting the duration or extent of phenomena from their current state. This Bayesian model indicates how people should…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Statistical Inference, Models, Prior Learning
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Cronin, Matthew A.; Gonzalez, Cleotilde; Sterman, John D. – Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2009
Accumulation is a fundamental process in dynamic systems: inventory accumulates production less shipments; the national debt accumulates the federal deficit. Effective decision making in such systems requires an understanding of the relationship between stocks and the flows that alter them. However, highly educated people are often unable to infer…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Researchers, Teachers, Adults
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Pedretti, Erminia; Nazir, Joanne – Science Education, 2011
It has been 40 years since science, technology, society, and environment (STSE) education first appeared in science education research and practice. Although supported among many educators worldwide, there is much confusion surrounding the STSE slogan. Widely differing discourses on STSE education and diverse ways of practicing, have led to an…
Descriptors: Science Education, Social Sciences, Technology Education, Environmental Education
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Andrews, Richard; Torgerson, Carole; Low, Graham; McGuinn, Nick – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2009
A systematic review was undertaken in 2006 to answer the question "What is the evidence for successful practice in teaching and learning with regard to non-fiction writing (specifically argumentational writing) for 7- to 14-year-olds?", using EPPI-Centre methodology. Results showed that certain conditions have to be in place. These…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Nonfiction, Persuasive Discourse, Educational Strategies
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Monroe, Brian M.; Read, Stephen J. – Psychological Review, 2008
A localist, parallel constraint satisfaction, artificial neural network model is presented that accounts for a broad collection of attitude and attitude-change phenomena. The network represents the attitude object and cognitions and beliefs related to the attitude, as well as how to integrate a persuasive message into this network. Short-term…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Attitude Change, Schemata (Cognition), Beliefs
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Oppenheimer, Daniel M. – Cognition, 2003
The "fast and frugal" approach to reasoning (Gigerenzer, G., & Todd, P. M. (1999). "Simple heuristics that make us smart." New York: Oxford University Press) claims that individuals use non-compensatory strategies in judgment--the idea that only one cue is taken into account in reasoning. The simplest and most important of these heuristics…
Descriptors: Cues, Cognitive Processes, Heuristics, Recognition (Psychology)
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Rasmussen, Chris; Marrongelle, Karen – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2006
Teaching in a manner consistent with reform recommendations is a challenging and often overwhelming task. Part of this challenge involves using students' thinking and understanding as a basis for the development of mathematical ideas (cf. NCTM, 2000). The purpose of this article is to address this challenge by developing the notion of "pedagogical…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Mathematics Education, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Speech Communication
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Abrahamson, Dor; Trninic, Dragan; Gutierrez, Jose F.; Huth, Jacob; Lee, Rosa G. – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2011
Radical constructivists advocate discovery-based pedagogical regimes that enable students to incrementally and continuously adapt their cognitive structures to the instrumented cultural environment. Some sociocultural theorists, however, maintain that learning implies discontinuity in conceptual development, because novices must appropriate expert…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation, Cultural Context
Glaser, Robert; And Others – 1991
This study seeks to establish which scientific reasoning skills are primarily domain-general and which appear to be domain-specific. The subjects, 12 university undergraduates, each participated in self-directed experimentation with three different content domains. The experimentation contexts were computer-based laboratories in d.c. circuits…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Discovery Learning, Heuristics, Higher Education
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Burns, Bruce D. – Cognitive Psychology, 2004
Gigerenzer (2000) and Anderson (1990) analyzed reasoning by asking: what are the reasoner's goals? This emphasizes the adaptiveness of behavior rather than whether a belief is normative. Belief in the ''hot hand'' in basketball suggests that players experiencing streaks should be given more shots, but this has been seen as a fallacy due to…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Beliefs, Adjustment (to Environment), Markov Processes
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Stanovich, Keith E.; West, Richard F. – Cognitive Psychology, 1999
Examines tasks from the heuristics and biases literature in light of the understanding/acceptance principle of P. Slovic and A. Tversky (1974). Shows how the variation and instability of responses can be analyzed to yield inferences about why descriptive and normative models of human reasoning and decision making sometimes do not coincide.…
Descriptors: Bias, Comprehension, Decision Making, Heuristics
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