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Cognitive Processes in the Reflective-Impulsive Cognitive Style

The Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2005
In this study, the authors improved the understanding of the cognitive processes underlying the reflective-impulsive cognitive style (RI), which was initially measured by J. Kagan, B. L. Rosman, D. Day, J. Albert, and W. Phillips (1964) on the Matching Familiar Figures Test (MFFT).
Paulette, Rozencwajg, Denis, Corroyer
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Reflections on shared cognition

Journal of Organizational Behavior, 2001
AbstractThe purpose of this paper is to highlight several fundamental questions that remain regarding shared cognition: (1) What must be ‘shared’? (2) What does ‘shared’ mean? (3) How should ‘shared’ be measured? and (4) What outcomes do we expect shared cognition to affect? A general and integrative description of these questions is provided.
Cannon-Bowers, Jams A., Salas, Eduardo
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Reflective Personality: Identifying Cognitive Style and Cognitive Complexity

Current Psychology, 2013
Categorized among learning practices, reflection involves cognitive processing. Some people say they reflect often, whereas others claim they are less inclined to reflect on a regular basis. The present study examines reflection in an academic learning setting.
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Reflections on learning and cognition

ZDM, 2014
The occasion of my 9th ICME—the first being in Berkeley in 1980, the most recent being in Seoul in 2012—provides an opportunity for reflecting on changes in the field over more than 30 years. “Learning and cognition” have a very different meaning now than they did in 1980.
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The Mirror Sign: A Reflection of Cognitive Decline?

Psychosomatics, 2012
Psychotic symptoms are common in older patients, with estimates of the prevalence of psychosis ranging from 4% to 10% in those over the age of 65 years. Often, the psychosis observed in this population is recent in onset. For example, in a retrospective study of patients over age 65 years admitted to a geriatric psychiatry inpatient service, late-life ...
J Loretta, Mulcare   +3 more
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Reflections on Cognitive Vision Systems

2003
A long list of buzzwords which percolated through the computer vision community during the past thirty years leads to the question: does 'Cognitive Vision Systems' just denote another such 'fleeting fad'? Upon closer inspection, many apparent 'buzzwords' refer to aspects of computer vision systems which became a legitimate target of widespread research
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On the Differentiation of Cognitive Reflection-Impulsivity

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1980
This investigation concerned the problems of confounding style and ability and generalizability in the case of indicators of cognitive reflection-impulsivity. On the basis of an interactional perspective, a number of simple assumptions about response latency and accuracy in cognitive tasks of reflection and impulsivity are developed and tasted in a ...
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Cognitive Scaffolding, Aids to Reflection

2019
This chapter examines how Samuel Taylor Coleridge pictured thinking as a distributed process, using as a case study his devotional handbook Aids to Reflection (1825). Coleridge explicitly framed Aids to Reflection as an assistive apparatus, and depicts ‘reflection’ as both an inner activity and a skilled interaction with a set of external tools.
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Measuring cognitive reflection without maths: Development and validation of the verbal cognitive reflection test

Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 2021
Miroslav Sirota   +2 more
exaly  

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