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Colleen M. Seifert

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  122
Citations -  5645

Colleen M. Seifert is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heuristics & Engineering design process. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 114 publications receiving 4578 citations. Previous affiliations of Colleen M. Seifert include Iowa State University & Yale University.

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Misinformation and Its Correction: Continued Influence and Successful Debiasing

TL;DR: Recommendations may help practitioners—including journalists, health professionals, educators, and science communicators—design effective misinformation retractions, educational tools, and public-information campaigns.
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Sources of the continued influence effect: When misinformation in memory affects later inferences.

TL;DR: This paper found that misinformation can still influence inferences one generates after a correction has occurred; however, providing an alternative that replaces the causal structure it affords can reduce the effects of misinformation.
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Teaching Creativity in Engineering Courses.

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of engineering pedagogy at a single university with seven engineering courses where instructors stated the goal of fostering creativity was conducted, which revealed opportunities for growth in students' creative skill development.
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Design Heuristics in Engineering Concept Generation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate how designers used product characteristics to define concepts, and how previous concepts were transformed into new solutions by modifying their characteristics, and reveal evidence for over 60 strategies for concept generation during the ideation stage.
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Using response time measures to assess guilty knowledge

TL;DR: Results from Experiment 1 showed that RT alone can reliably discriminate "guilty" from "innocent" participants, and indicated that an RT-based paradigm is more resistant to strategic manipulation than previously suggested and may be a viable alternative to the polygraph for detecting guilty knowledge.