359 research outputs found
A Motivational Determinant of Facial Emotion Recognition : Regulatory Focus Affects Recognition of Emotions in Faces
Funding: The research was supported by The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO, project 452-07-006). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
In the eyes of the beholder: How experts and novices interpret dynamic stimuli
Jarodzka, H., Scheiter, K., Gerjets, P., & Van Gog, T. (2010). In the eyes of the beholder: How experts and novices interpret dynamic stimuli. Learning and Instruction, 20, 146-154. doi:10.1016/j.learninstruc.2009.02.019Tasks with a complex, dynamic visual component require not only the acquisition of conceptual/procedural but also of perceptual/attentional skills. This study examined expertise differences in perceiving and interpreting complex, dynamic visual stimuli on a performance and on a process level, including perceptual and conceptual strategies. Performance, eye movement, and verbal report data were obtained from seven experts and 14 novices. Results show that experts compared to novices attend more to relevant aspects of the stimulus, use more heterogeneous task approaches, and use knowledge-based shortcuts. Implications for instructional design for the acquisition of perceptual skills are discussed
Attention guidance during example study via the model’s eye movements.
Van Gog, T., Jarodzka, H., Scheiter, K., Gerjets, P., & Paas, F. (2009). Attention guidance during example study via the model’s eye movements. Computers in Human Behavior, 25, 785-791.Research has shown that guiding students’ attention guides their thought, and that attention can be communicated via eye movements. Therefore, this study investigates whether such a procedure can further enhance the effectiveness of examples in which a solution procedure is demonstrated to students by a (expert) model. Students’ attention was guided by showing them not only the model’s problem-solving actions on the computer screen, but also the model’s eye movements while doing so. Interestingly, results show that combined with a verbal description of the thought process, this form of attention guidance had detrimental effects on learning. Consequences for further research on attention guidance and instructional design are discussed
Conveying clinical reasoning based on visual observation via eye-movement modelling examples
Jarodzka, H., Balslev, T., Holmqvist, K., Nyström, M., Scheiter, K., Gerjets, P., & Eika, B. (2012). Conveying clinical reasoning based on visual observation via eye-movement modelling examples. Instructional Science, 40(5), 813-827. doi:10.1007/s11251-012-9218-5Complex perceptual tasks, like clinical reasoning based on visual observations
of patients, require not only conceptual knowledge about diagnostic classes but also the
skills to visually search for symptoms and interpret these observations. However, medical
education so far has focused very little on how visual observation skills can be efficiently
conveyed to novices. The current study applied a novel instructional method to teach these
skills by showing the learners how an expert model visually searches and interprets
symptoms (i.e., eye-movement modelling examples; EMMEs). Case videos of patients
were verbally explained by a model (control condition) and presented to students. In the
experimental conditions, the participants received a recording of the model’s eye movements
superimposed on the case videos. The eye movements were displayed by either
highlighting the features the model focused on with a circle (the circle condition) or by
blurring the features the model did not focus on (the spotlight condition). Compared to the
other two conditions, results show that a spotlight on the case videos better guides the
students’ attention towards the relevant features. Moreover, when testing the students’
clinical reasoning skills with videos of new patient cases without any guidance participants studying EMMEs with a spotlight showed improved their visual search and
enhanced interpretation performance of the symptoms in contrast to participants in either
the circle or the control condition. These findings show that a spotlight EMME can successfully
convey clinical reasoning based on visual observations
Effects of Task Experience and Layout on Learning from Text and Pictures with or without Unnecessary Picture Descriptions
The presentation of extraneous (i.e., irrelevant or unnecessary) information may
hamper learning with multimedia. The present study examined whether people can
learn to ignore unnecessary information with increasing experience with the task and
whether this depends on the layout of that information. In two experiments,
participants learned about the process of mitosis from a multimedia slideshow, with
each slide presenting a combination of expository text and a picture on one of the
stages in the process. Slides either contained no unnecessary text (control condition)
or unnecessary text (i.e., merely describing the picture) either integrated in the picture
(integrated condition) or presented underneath the picture (separated condition).
Knowledge about the studied mitosis phase was tested immediately after each slide
using a cloze test. Across Experiments 1 and 2, we did not find a reliable negative effect
of the unnecessary text on cloze test performance. As a result, the question of whether
task experience would reduce or eliminate that negative effect could not be answered.
The eye movement data did confirm, however, that participants attended less to the
unnecessary information with increasing task experience, suggesting that students
can adapt their study strategy and learn to ignore unnecessary information
Role and Development of Perceptual Skills in Medical Education
Jarodzka, H., Balslev, T., Holmqvist, K., Nyström, M., Scheiter, K., Gerjets, P., & Eika, B. (2010, May). Role and Development of Perceptual Skills in Medical Education. The Scandinavian Workshop on Applied Eye-Tracking (SWAET), Lund, Sweden.This talk is about a study in which we tried to convey perceptual skills in clinical reasoning on patient video cases
Fostering perceptual skills in medical diagnosis
Jarodzka, H., Balslev, T., Holmqvist, K., Nyström, M., Scheiter, K., Gerjets, P., & Eika, B. (2010, August). Fostering perceptual skills in medical diagnosis. Meeting of the EARLI SIG6/7 Instructional Design and Learning and Instruction with Computers, Ulm, Germany.Perceptually demanding tasks, like diagnosing seizures based on patient video cases, not only require the acquisition of conceptual but also of perceptual skills; like visually searching and interpreting relevant features. Showing the eye movements of a didactically behaving expert conveyed perceptual skills in a perceptually demanding, but conceptually simple task. The current study applied this method to medical education – a conceptually complex task – by example videos, which were verbally explained by an expert. In addition the experimental groups saw a display of the expert's eye movements recorded, while he performed the task. Results show that blurring non-attended areas of the expert guides the attention of the students during example study, leads to enhanced visual search and interpretation of relevant features in contrast to displaying attended areas as a circle and to a control group without attention guidance. Thus, spotlight attention guidance fosters learning of perceptual skills in medical diagnosis
Using Spacing to Promote Lasting Learning in Educational Contexts. Promises and Challenges.
Gefördert im Rahmen des Projekts DEA
Research and practice in dialogue for shaping the digital transformation in the school education system: the competence network lernen:digital
Im Kompetenzverbund lernen:digital entwickeln 24 Projektverbünde Fortbildungs- und Schulentwicklungsmaßnahmen, die Lehrkräfte in ihrem professionellen Handeln in einer Kultur der Digitalität unterstützen sollen. Eine Transferstelle vernetzt die Projektverbünde, betreibt Forschung, macht Angebote zur Wissenschaftskommunikation und organisiert den bundesweiten Transfer in die Lehrkräftebildung. Im Bericht wird die am Mehrebenensystem Schule orientierte, ko-konstruktive Transferstrategie beschrieben. (DIPF/Orig.)In the competence network lernen:digital, 24 project networks are developing further education and school development measures to support teachers in their professional activities in a culture of digitality. A transfer office links the project networks, conducts research, offers science communication and organizes the nationwide transfer to teacher training. The report describes the co-constructive transfer strategy based on the multi-level school system. (DIPF/Orig.
Gender Stereotypes in a Children's Television Program: Effects on Girls' and Boys' Stereotype Endorsement, Math Performance, Motivational Dispositions, and Attitudes
Television programs are a central part of children's everyday lives. These programs often transmit stereotypes about gender roles such as “math is for boys and not for girls.” So far, however, it is unclear whether stereotypes that are embedded in television programs affect girls' and boys' performance, motivational dispositions, or attitudes. On the basis of research on expectancy-value theory and stereotype threat, we conducted a randomized study with a total of 335 fifth-grade students to address this question. As the experimental material, we used a television program that had originally been produced for a national TV channel. The program was designed to show children that math could be interesting and fun. In the experimental condition, the program included a gender stereotyped segment in which two girls who were frustrated with math copied their math homework from a male classmate. In the control condition, participants watched an equally long, neutral summary of the first part of the video. We investigated effects on boys' and girls' stereotype endorsement, math performance, and different motivational constructs to gain insights into differential effects. On the basis of prior research, we expected negative effects of watching the stereotypes on girls' performance, motivational dispositions, and attitudes. Effects on the same outcomes for boys as well as children's stereotype endorsement were explored as open questions. We pre-registered our research predictions and analyses before conducting the experiment. Our results provide partial support for short-term effects of gender stereotypes embedded in television programs: Watching the stereotypes embedded in the video increased boys' and girls' stereotype endorsement. Boys reported a higher sense of belonging but lower utility value after watching the video with the stereotypes. Boys' other outcome variables were not affected, and there were also no effects on girl's performance, motivational dispositions, or attitudes. Results offer initial insights into how even short segments involving gender stereotypes in television shows can influence girls' and boys' stereotype endorsement and how such stereotypes may constitute one factor that contributes to gender differences in the STEM fields
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