How sleep deprivation affects cognitive thinking

How sleep deprivation affects cognitive thin" rel="nofollow">inkin" rel="nofollow">ing In a 10 to 12 page paper, you will examin" rel="nofollow">ine how cognitive psychologists thin" rel="nofollow">ink about a specific aspect of how people thin" rel="nofollow">ink. Your goals are to (1) identify, for your topic, the major issue or issues that cognitive psychologists are addressin" rel="nofollow">ing, (2) discuss empirical studies of the topic, in" rel="nofollow">includin" rel="nofollow">ing methods and key fin" rel="nofollow">indin" rel="nofollow">ings, (3) explain" rel="nofollow">in cognitive psychologists? current state of thin" rel="nofollow">inkin" rel="nofollow">ing about the topic based on research to date, (4) outlin" rel="nofollow">ine their ideas for further research on the topic, and (5) discuss the relevance of this topic and body of research for our everyday lives. 1) Keep a tight focus on one, specific topic. See your main" rel="nofollow">in topic as the hub of a wheel. All you have to say about that topic, organized in" rel="nofollow">in headin" rel="nofollow">ings and subheadin" rel="nofollow">ings, should relate to that one topic. Students often make the mistake of goin" rel="nofollow">ing down all these side roads. So ask yourself, is there anythin" rel="nofollow">ing in" rel="nofollow">in my proposed paper that could be considered a separate piece of research? I gave this feedback to a number of you this week. 2) References. You should reference your text, plus a min" rel="nofollow">inimum of 4 additional academic sources. These you can fin" rel="nofollow">ind in" rel="nofollow">in the NU library. Websites endin" rel="nofollow">ing in" rel="nofollow">in .com or .net are not considered academic. Those endin" rel="nofollow">ing in" rel="nofollow">in .gov, .org, or .edu are acceptable. A very common mistake is in" rel="nofollow">in the citation of references. If you make a direct quote, name the author, date of publication, and page number. When paraphrasin" rel="nofollow">ing, name the author and date. No page number. Please avoid block quotes. Review the standard for quotin" rel="nofollow">ing one author more than once in" rel="nofollow">in the same paragraph. You should use timely references to give weight to what YOU are sayin" rel="nofollow">ing. A common mistake is a paper filled with far too many references. Give yourself a voice. 3) Length. Your paper should in" rel="nofollow">include a cover, abstract, and reference pages. The body of your work should be 8-10 pages. Please read in" rel="nofollow">in its entirety the PSY 433 Sample Paper.doc found in" rel="nofollow">in the Announcement titled, More Research Paper Help. Pay particular attention to how to format the cover and references pages. 4) Less is More! Don?t try to say too much. Stick to your main" rel="nofollow">in focus. Don?t bite off more than you can chew. 5) Headin" rel="nofollow">ings and subheadin" rel="nofollow">ings really aid the reader in" rel="nofollow">in followin" rel="nofollow">ing you, so you should get in" rel="nofollow">in the habit of writin" rel="nofollow">ing as such. You should begin" rel="nofollow">in your paper with an Introduction that is an elaboration of the abstract. Your paper should end with a Conclusion or Discussion paragraph. In the discussion you should offer your opin" rel="nofollow">inions on further research needed in" rel="nofollow">in relation to the topic you examin" rel="nofollow">ined. 6) Personalization. Please feel free to blend the academic with the personal by sharin" rel="nofollow">ing examples or stories from your own life, or real world examples or case studies. Please avoid makin" rel="nofollow">ing your work a dry piece of research. Spice it up a bit through personalization.