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McCrackin, Sarah D.; Provencher, Sabrina; Mendell, Ethan; Ristic, Jelena – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
While face masks provide necessary protection against disease spread, they occlude the lower face parts (chin, mouth, nose) and consequently impair the ability to accurately perceive facial emotions. Here we examined how wearing face masks impacted making inferences about emotional states of others (i.e., affective theory of mind; Experiment 1)…
Descriptors: Disease Control, Human Body, Recognition (Psychology), Psychological Patterns
Moore, Christi Camper; Moore, David Richard – Journal of Dance Education, 2021
This article connects the "Theory of Extended Mind" with the use of three-dimensional, physical objects in dance pedagogy. The theory of the extended mind supposes that cognition is an activity that reaches out from the mind to the body and to the environment. In particular, we take up Dewey's pragmatic Instrumentalism as a framework…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Theory of Mind, Problem Solving, Teaching Methods
Gee, James Paul; Zhang, Qing Archer – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2022
Educational research regularly claims, with lots of evidence, that humans learn from experience. However, experience is composed of outer and inner sensations. Thus, if humans learn from experience, we would expect that educational research would be replete with work on sensation. Yet sensation in the wild, outside laboratory studies, plays no…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Educational Research, Sensory Experience, Learning Processes