Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/29670
Title: Cognitive emotions in e-learning processes and their potential relationship with students’ academic adjustment
Authors: D'Errico, Francesca
Paciello, Marinella
De Carolis, Bernardina
Vattanid, Alessandro
Palestra, Giuseppe
Anzivino, Giuseppe
Keywords: Self-efficacy
Distance education
Student adjustment
Human-computer interaction
Issue Date: 2018-04
Publisher: University of Malta. Centre for Resillience & Socio-Emotional Health
Citation: D'Errico, F., Paciello, M., De Carolis, B., Vattanid, Al., Palestra, G., & Anzivino, G. (2018). Cognitive emotions in e-learning processes and their potential relationship with students’ academic adjustment. International Journal of Emotional Education, 10 (1), 89-111.
Abstract: In times of growing importance and emphasis on improving academic outcomes for young people, their academic selves/lives are increasingly becoming more central to their understanding of their own wellbeing. How they experience and perceive their academic successes or failures, can influence their perceived self-efficacy and eventual academic achievement. To this end, ‘cognitive emotions’, elicited to acquire or develop new skills/knowledges, can play a crucial role as they indicate the state or the “flow” of a student’s emotions, when facing challenging tasks. Within innovative teaching models, measuring the affective components of learning have been mainly based on self-reports and scales which have neglected the real-time detection of emotions, through for example, recording or measuring facial expressions. The aim of the present study is to test the reliability of an ad hoc software trained to detect and classify cognitive emotions from facial expressions across two different environments, namely a video-lecture and a chat with teacher, and to explore cognitive emotions in relation to academic e-selfefficacy and academic adjustment. To pursue these goals, we used video-recordings of ten psychology students from an online university engaging in online learning tasks, and employed software to automatically detect eleven cognitive emotions. Preliminary results support and extend prior studies, illustrating how exploring cognitive emotions in real time can inform the development and success of academic e-learning interventions aimed at monitoring and promoting students’ wellbeing.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/29670
ISSN: 20737629
Appears in Collections:IJEE, Volume 10 Issue 1
IJEE, Volume 10 Issue 1

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