Misconceptions about scientific concepts often prevail even if learners are confronted with conflicting evidence. This study tested the facilitative role of surprise in children’s revision of misconceptions regarding water displacement in a sample of German children (N = 94, aged 6–9 years, 46% female). Surprise was measured via the pupil dilation response. It was induced by letting children generate predictions before presenting them with outcomes that conflicted with their misconception. Compared to a control condition, generating predictions boosted children’s surprise and led to a greater revision of misconceptions (d = 0.56). Surprise further predicted successful belief revision during the learning phase. These results suggest that sur...
Children construct scientific ideas from an early age. They are influenced by their observations and...
This paper explores the role of surprise in the fostering of rationality by critically examining Sch...
Surprise is a ubiquitous phenomenon that both draws on cognition and affects cognition, in a number...
Three experiments were carried out to determine whether there is a lag in predicting surprise relati...
Decades of research find that young children look longer at surprising events than expected ones, an...
This study investigated whether prompting children to generate predictions about an outcome facilita...
Using both behavioral and eye-tracking methodology, we tested whether and how asking students to gen...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Using both behavioral and eye-tracking methodology, we tested whether and how asking students to gen...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Early theories of surprise, including Darwin's, argued that it was predominantly a basic emotion. Re...
Using unexpected events to teach difficult concepts in HE. People of all ages construct ideas that a...
A discrepancy between what was predicted and what is observed has been linked to increased looking t...
Surprise and other signals related to surprise, such as novelty and prediction error, are believed t...
Children construct scientific ideas from an early age. They are influenced by their observations and...
This paper explores the role of surprise in the fostering of rationality by critically examining Sch...
Surprise is a ubiquitous phenomenon that both draws on cognition and affects cognition, in a number...
Three experiments were carried out to determine whether there is a lag in predicting surprise relati...
Decades of research find that young children look longer at surprising events than expected ones, an...
This study investigated whether prompting children to generate predictions about an outcome facilita...
Using both behavioral and eye-tracking methodology, we tested whether and how asking students to gen...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Using both behavioral and eye-tracking methodology, we tested whether and how asking students to gen...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Early theories of surprise, including Darwin's, argued that it was predominantly a basic emotion. Re...
Using unexpected events to teach difficult concepts in HE. People of all ages construct ideas that a...
A discrepancy between what was predicted and what is observed has been linked to increased looking t...
Surprise and other signals related to surprise, such as novelty and prediction error, are believed t...
Children construct scientific ideas from an early age. They are influenced by their observations and...
This paper explores the role of surprise in the fostering of rationality by critically examining Sch...
Surprise is a ubiquitous phenomenon that both draws on cognition and affects cognition, in a number...