Investigate the Effects of Background Music on Visual Cognitive Tasks Using Multimodal Learning Analytics

Author(s):  
Ying Que ◽  
Xiao Hu
IEEE Access ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Ryosuke Kawamura ◽  
Shizuka Shirai ◽  
Noriko Takemura ◽  
Mehrasa Alizadeh ◽  
Mutlu Cukurova ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 220-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo Blikstein ◽  
Marcelo Worsley

New high-frequency multimodal data collection technologies and machine learning analysis techniques could offer new insights into learning, especially when students have the opportunity to generate unique, personalized artifacts, such as computer programs, robots, and solutions engineering challenges. To date most of the work on learning analytics and educational data mining has been focused on online courses and cognitive tutors, both of which provide a high degree of structure to the tasks, and are restricted to interactions that occur in front of a computer screen. In this paper, we argue that multimodal learning analytics can offer new insights into students’ learning trajectories in more complex and open-ended learning environments. We present several examples of this work and its educational application.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-48
Author(s):  
Marcelo Worsley ◽  
Khalil Anderson ◽  
Natalie Melo ◽  
JooYoung Jang

Collaboration has garnered global attention as an important skill for the 21st century. While researchers have been doing work on collaboration for nearly a century, many of the questions that the field is investigating overlook the need for students to learn how to read and respond to different collaborative settings. Existing research focuses on chronicling the various factors that predict the effectiveness of a collaborative experience, or on changing user behaviour in the moment. These are worthwhile research endeavours for developing our theoretical understanding of collaboration. However, there is also a need to centre student perceptions and experiences with collaboration as an important area of inquiry. Based on a survey of 131 university students, we find that student collaboration-related concerns can be represented across seven different categories or dimensions: Climate, Compatibility, Communication, Conflict, Context, Contribution, and Constructive. These categories extend prior research on collaboration and can help the field ensure that future collaboration analytics tools are designed to support the ways that students think about and utilize collaboration. Finally, we describe our instantiation of many of these dimensions in our collaborative analytics tool, BLINC, and suggest that these seven dimensions can be instructive for re-orienting the Multimodal Learning Analytics (MMLA) and collaboration analytics communities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 704-717
Author(s):  
Vicente Lopez Camacho ◽  
Elena de la Guia ◽  
Teresa Olivares ◽  
M. Julia Flores ◽  
Luis Orozco-Barbosa

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