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Background: Phylogenetics is one of the main methodologies to understand cross-cutting principles of evolution, such as common ancestry and speciation. Phylogenetic trees, however, are reportedly challenging to teach and learn. Furthermore, phylogenetics teaching methods traditionally rely solely on visual information, creating inaccessibility for people with visual impairment. Sensory learning style models advocate for tailoring teaching to individual preferred sensory learning style. However, recent research suggests that optimal learning, independently of preferred learning style, depends on the types of transmitted information and learning tasks. The lack of empirically-supported education into the effectiveness of teaching phylogenetics through alternative sensory modalities potentially hinders learning. The aim of this study was to determine whether phylogenetic trees could be better understood if presented in kinaesthetic or multisensory teaching modalities.
Results: Participants ( = 52) self-assessed personal learning style and were randomly assigned to: visual, kinaesthetic or multisensory learning conditions. Phylogeny reading performance was better for both kinaesthetic and multisensory teaching conditions, compared to the visual teaching condition. There was no main effect and no interaction effect of personal learning style.
Conclusions: This study establishes a baseline for further research by suggesting that easy-to-implement kinaesthetic teaching modalities might support phylogenetic tree learning and reading. This has practical implications for evolution education and accessibility for students with visual impairment, underscoring the need to shift from vision-centric teaching paradigms towards evidence-based instructional strategies that accommodate sensory diversity.
Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12052-024-00215-y.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12052-024-00215-y | DOI Listing |
Psychophysiology
September 2025
Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Brain Science and Mental Health, Faculty of Psychology, Shandong Normal University, Jinan, China.
"Metacontrol" refers to the ability to achieve an adaptive balance between more persistent and more flexible cognitive-control styles. Recent evidence from tasks focusing on the regulation of response conflict and of switching between tasks suggests a consistent relationship between aperiodic EEG activity and task conditions that are likely to elicit a more persistent versus more flexible control style. Here we investigated whether this relationship between metacontrol and aperiodic activity can also be demonstrated for working memory (WM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Craniofac Surg
September 2025
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL.
Outcomes were to compare the accuracy of 2 large-language models-GPT-4o and o3-Mini-against medical-student performance on otolaryngology-focused, USMLE-style multiple-choice questions. With permission from AMBOSS, we extracted 146 Step 2 CK questions tagged "Otolaryngology" and stratified them by AMBOSS difficulty (levels 1-5). Each item was presented verbatim to GPT-4o and o3-Mini through their official APIs; outputs were scored correct/incorrect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Prof Nurs
September 2025
Appalachian State University, Beaver College of Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Boone, NC 28608, United States of America. Electronic address:
Background: Covid-19 pandemic restrictions created unique challenges for nursing students. Little is known about how pandemic restrictions affected nursing students who spent their early years of pre-licensure education in virtual environments.
Purpose: Explore traditional junior-level baccalaureate degree nursing students' experiences in post-Covid face-to-face classrooms during their first semester in nursing major courses.
JMIR Med Educ
September 2025
Center for Studies and Development of Health, Faculdade de Medicina de São José do Rio Preto, Avenida Brigadeiro Faria Lima, 5416, São José do Rio Preto, 15090-000, Brazil, 55 17982022252.
Background: Learning style is a biologically and developmentally imposed configuration of personal characteristics that makes the same teaching method effective for some and ineffective for others. Studies support a relationship between learning style and career choice, resulting in learning style patterns observed in distinct types of residency programs, which can also be applied to general surgery, from medical school to the latest stages of training. The methodologies, populations, and contexts of the few studies pertinent to the matter are very different from one another, and a scoping review on this theme will unequivocally enhance and organize what is already known.
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