Results 291 to 300 of about 36,725 (310)
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Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 1999
Recent cognitive-behavioural models of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) developed by Salkovskis (1985, 1989, 1998) and Rachman (1997, 1998) have advanced our understanding of the disorder substantially. Inherent in both models is the assumption that beliefs about obsessions are critical in the development and persistence of the disorder.
Christine Purdon, David A. Clark
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Recent cognitive-behavioural models of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) developed by Salkovskis (1985, 1989, 1998) and Rachman (1997, 1998) have advanced our understanding of the disorder substantially. Inherent in both models is the assumption that beliefs about obsessions are critical in the development and persistence of the disorder.
Christine Purdon, David A. Clark
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Jargon as a barrier to effective science communication: Evidence from metacognition
Public Understanding of Science, 2019In this experiment (N = 650), we examine the negative consequences of jargon on individuals’ perceptions of emerging scientific technology and aim to explain these effects.
Olivia M. Bullock+3 more
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The Relationship between Metacognitive Ability and Metacognitive Accuracy
Metacognition and Learning, 2020Judgments of learning (JOLs), as one type of metacognitive judgments, are assessments that people make about how well they have learned material. The effective use of JOLs depends on various factors, including task-specific variables and the learner’s own metacognitive resources.
Kyongcheon Min+3 more
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Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2007
The feeling that we are agents, intentionally making things happen by our own actions, is foundational to our understanding of ourselves as humans. People's metacognitions of agency were investigated in 4 experiments. Participants played a game in which they tried to touch downward scrolling Xs and avoid touching Os.
Matthew J. Greene, Janet Metcalfe
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The feeling that we are agents, intentionally making things happen by our own actions, is foundational to our understanding of ourselves as humans. People's metacognitions of agency were investigated in 4 experiments. Participants played a game in which they tried to touch downward scrolling Xs and avoid touching Os.
Matthew J. Greene, Janet Metcalfe
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2009
AbstractWe agree with Carruthers that evidence for metacognition in species lacking mindreading provides dramatic evidence in favor of the metacognition-is-prior account and against the mindreading-is-prior account. We discuss this existing evidence and explain why an evolutionary perspective favors the former account and poses serious problems for the
Couchman, Justin J.+3 more
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AbstractWe agree with Carruthers that evidence for metacognition in species lacking mindreading provides dramatic evidence in favor of the metacognition-is-prior account and against the mindreading-is-prior account. We discuss this existing evidence and explain why an evolutionary perspective favors the former account and poses serious problems for the
Couchman, Justin J.+3 more
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Metacognitions in Problem Gambling
Journal of Gambling Studies, 2010Problem gambling is heterogeneous in nature, ranging in severity from occasional but problematic gambling episodes, to extreme, impulsive and pervasive gambling behaviour. Problem gambling may be accompanied by a sense of impaired control and can give rise to financial, interpersonal, legal and vocational costs for the sufferer, their families and ...
Bruce A. Fernie+3 more
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Metacognition, the ability to think about one's own thinking, has been a subject of philosophical inquiry since ancient times, yet is only more recently coined as a term and investigated empirically. The main components of metacognition are commonly held to be metacognitive knowledge (declarative, procedural, and conditional) and metacognitive ...
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