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Cognitive flexibility is briefly defined as the ability of individuals to adapt to a changing environment flexibly. This chapter provides a comprehensive review of research to explain the associations between cognitive flexibility and specific 21st-century skills, to understand the definition of the phenomenon from different perspectives, and to ...
Özgür Örün, Işıner Sever
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Özgür Örün, Işıner Sever
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Aerobic Exercise Enhances Cognitive Flexibility
Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings, 2009Physical activity is believed to prevent cognitive decline and may enhance frontal lobe activity.Subjects were 91 healthy adults enrolled in a wellness center. Over a 10 week intervention, controls were aerobically active 0-2 days per week. Half the intervention group was active 3-4 days/week and half 5-7 days/week.
Steven, Masley +2 more
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SES affects infant cognitive flexibility
Infant Behavior and Development, 2012Cognitive flexibility requires processing multiple sources of information and flexible adaptation of behavioral responses. Poverty negatively impacts cognitive control in young children, but its effects on infants are not well-understood. This study investigated longitudinally the development of cognitive flexibility in low-income infants.
Melissa W, Clearfield, Laura C, Niman
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2017
Abstract Chapter 8 of Unified Protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders: Workbook looks at one part of our emotional experiences—our thoughts—and describes how thoughts are very important for influencing how we feel. The chapter describes our tendency to get stuck in automatic patterns of thinking, which we refer to ...
David H. Barlow +8 more
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Abstract Chapter 8 of Unified Protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders: Workbook looks at one part of our emotional experiences—our thoughts—and describes how thoughts are very important for influencing how we feel. The chapter describes our tendency to get stuck in automatic patterns of thinking, which we refer to ...
David H. Barlow +8 more
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Inducing Flexibility in Cognitive Rigidity
International Journal of Neuroscience, 1987This study examined the extent to which normal learners identified as cognitively rigid could use alternate strategies when instructed to do so. The total number of rigid solutions on the standard portion of the "Three Jar Test" was used to divide eighty normal adults into high and low rigid groups.
J W, Gray, R S, Dean, M L, Seretny
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Cognitive Flexibility in Primary Dystonia
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 2016AbstractObjectives Although primary dystonia is typically characterized as a movement disorder, it is also associated with cognitive alterations in the domain of executive functioning which may arise from changes in cortico-basal ganglia circuits.
Florian, Lange +4 more
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Cholinergic circuits in cognitive flexibility
Neuroscience, 2017Cognitive flexibility, the ability to adjust behavior in response to new and unexpected conditions in the environment, is essential for adaptation to new challenges and survival. The cholinergic system is an important modulator of this complex behavior however, the exact cholinergic circuits involved in this modulation and the precise influence of ...
Vania F, Prado +3 more
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Meditation, mindfulness and cognitive flexibility
Consciousness and Cognition, 2009This study investigated the link between meditation, self-reported mindfulness and cognitive flexibility as well as other attentional functions. It compared a group of meditators experienced in mindfulness meditation with a meditation-naïve control group on measures of Stroop interference and the "d2-concentration and endurance test".
Adam, Moore, Peter, Malinowski
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Individual Differences in Cognitive Flexibility
Biological Psychiatry, 2013I s it better to be flexible, or persistent? A colleague once said that the secret to success in science is perseveration (no, not mere perseverence—that wouldn’t get you very far at all). Yet we all believe that the highest levels of cognitive function are associated with extreme flexibility—the ability to juggle many things at once and not get hung ...
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The cognitive flexibility theory0
ACM SIGCSE Bulletin, 2001Hypermedia engineering constitutes the employment of an engineering approach to the development of hypermedia applications. Its main teaching objectives are for students to learn what an engineering approach means and how measurement can be applied.This paper presents the application of the Cognitive Flexibility Theory as an instructional theory to ...
Emilia Mendes +2 more
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