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Evidence from education, psychology, and neuroscience suggests that investing in the development of the social-emotional imagination is essential to cultivating giftedness in adolescents. Nurturing these capacities may be especially effective for promoting giftedness in students who are likely to lose interest and ambition over time. Giftedness is frequently equated with high general intelligence as measured by IQ tests, but this narrow conceptualization does not adequately capture students' abilities to utilize their talents strategically to fully realize their future possible selves. The brain's default mode network is thought to play an important role in supporting imaginative thinking about the self and others across time. Because this network's functioning is temporarily attenuated when individuals engage in task- and action-oriented focus (mindsets thought to engage the brain's executive attention network), we suggest that consistently focusing students on tasks requiring immediate action could undermine long-term cultivation of giftedness. We argue that giftedness-especially in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)-can be cultivated by encouraging adolescents' intellectual curiosity and supporting their ability to connect schoolwork to a larger purpose. Improving STEM and gifted education may depend upon a shift from knowledge transmission and regimented evaluation to creative exploration, intentional reflectiveness, and mindful switching between task focus and imagining.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nyas.13165 | DOI Listing |
BMC Psychol
April 2025
School of Psychology, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou, Fujian, 350007, China.
Objectives: In some services involving social and emotional needs (such as psychological counseling), people seem to prefer human services over AI. Exploring the psychological mechanisms behind this preference can help increase people's acceptance of AI-based psychological counseling. This study aims to explore the differences in people's consultation intention for human versus AI across different counseling scenarios, as well as the role of trust (including cognitive and emotional trust) between humans and AI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Neurodyn
October 2024
Research Center of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Normal University, Dalian, 116029 China.
Expectation States Theory suggests that social status carries emotions, with higher statuses producing positive emotions and lower statuses leading to negative emotions. However, the theory is broad and lacks empirical evidence. This study investigated whether positive and negative evaluations from positions of higher and lower social hierarchies affect decisions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Autism Dev Disord
November 2024
Department of Special Needs Education, Ghent University, Henri Dunantlaan 2, Ghent, B-9000, Belgium.
This study adopts a person-centered approach to evaluate personality diversity as a source of interpersonal variability in autistic children and adolescents, and how personality subgroup membership relates to variability in autistic characteristics, social-emotional presentations, and parenting outcomes. Latent Profile Analysis was used to analyze 569 parent reports on a child-based Five-Factor-Model personality measure (aged 6-18 years; M = 11.8 years, SD = 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonogr Soc Res Child Dev
September 2024
Psychology Department, University of Toronto, Alexander von Humbolt Professor, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany.
Prosocial behavior is a distinguishing characteristic of human nature. Although prosocial behaviors emerge early in development, contextual factors play an important role in how these behaviors are manifested over development. A large body of research focuses on the trajectory of prosocial development across diverse cultures and investigating contexts that foster it.
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