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Orwoll, Lucinda; Achenbaum, W. Andrew – Human Development, 1993
Drawing on a model of wisdom that includes components in three domains (personality, cognition, and conation) and across three levels (intrapersonal, interpersonal, and transpersonal), highlights potential differences in the ways women and men attain and express wisdom; and examines interactive patterns across the components of wisdom. (BC)
Descriptors: Individual Development, Interpersonal Competence, Models, Personality
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Harding, Carol Gibb – Human Development, 1982
The development of intention to communicate among infants is discussed. In addition, the construct of intention is examined and a model describing the development of intention is proposed. The model is used to describe both the development of intentional behavior and communication as an intentional behavior. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Individual Development, Infant Behavior, Infants
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Gauvain, Mary – Human Development, 1995
Discusses the development of thinking from a sociocultural perspective, focusing on how Super and Harkness' (1986) concept of "developmental niche" may be used as a framework for organizing cognitive developmental research in relation to culture. Argues for the utility of this approach in furthering understanding of the precise linkages between…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology, Cultural Influences, Learning Processes
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Van der Veer, Rene – Human Development, 1996
Chronicles Piaget's and Vygotsky's criticism of each other's ideas on childhood egocentrism. Notes that genuine, critical dialog failed to develop because Piaget did not reply to Vygotsky's criticism at first. Five reasons for his reticence are considered: (1) a language barrier; (2) lack of knowledge; (3) quality of the criticism; (4) ideology;…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Criticism, Egocentrism
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Lucariello, Joan – Human Development, 1995
Discusses four schools of thought in cultural psychology: (1) the "mind and culture" school, which treated culture and cognition as separate; (2) the "mind in culture" school, which sees cognition and culture as interacting in practices; (3) the "culture in mind" school, which sees cultural categories as intrinsic to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Influences, Culture
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Tudge, Jonathan R. H.; Winterhoff, Paul A. – Human Development, 1993
Because developmental theories of Vygotsky, Piaget, and Bandura are far more complex than much of the empirical work based on them, researchers have concentrated on relatively narrow aspects of each man's ideas, in the process magnifying the differences between them. Nevertheless, basic differences do exist in each theorist's conceptualization of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Epistemology, Individual Differences, Models
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van Geert, Paul – Human Development, 1996
Compares differential and developmental approaches to clinical and developmental problems such as suicide. Contends that abstract model variables (such as suicidal tendency), whose meaning depends on the model in which they function, need a translation between the variable and empirical data. Maintains that practitioners need a model allowing for…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Change, Child Development
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Hammack, Phillip L. – Human Development, 2005
Through the application of life course theory to the study of sexual orientation, this paper specifies a new paradigm for research on human sexual orientation that seeks to reconcile divisions among biological, social science, and humanistic paradigms. Recognizing the historical, social, and cultural relativity of human development, this paradigm…
Descriptors: Models, Sexual Identity, Sexual Orientation, Social Sciences
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Moshman, David – Human Development, 1995
Proposes a theory of reasoning and outlines four general types of reasoning (case-based, law-based, coherence-based, and dialectical) based on the constraints the reasoning seeks to honor. The development of reasoning is presented as a continuing construction and reconstruction of self-constraints and justifications for those constraints,…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Epistemology, Intellectual Freedom
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Cicchetti, Dante – Human Development, 1996
Developmental theories can be augmented by incorporating knowledge about atypical ontogenesis. Examination of individuals with high-risk conditions and psychopathological disorders can shed light on system organization, disorganization, and reorganization. Child maltreatment is examined to illustrate benefits from studying individuals subjected to…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Attachment Behavior, Child Abuse, Cognitive Development
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Romaniuk, Jean Gasen; Romaniuk, Michael – Human Development, 1981
Discusses research in creativity with particular emphasis on the problems encountered in assessing creativity from a life-span developmental framework. Alternative developmental models and measures are discussed as future research recommendations for the assessment of life-span creativity. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Creativity, Developmental Psychology
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Pascual-Leone, Juan – Human Development, 1994
Notes that Halford's book does not really address children's own understanding but rather the psychologist's attempt to understand children from the outside. Discusses the five major sets of ideas at the core of Halford's explanations of capacity, complexity/dimensionality, development, and learning. Examines two arguments against Halford's…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Children, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
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Wolf, Dennie Palmer – Human Development, 1997
Discusses study of the development of children's drawing as infused with Western cultural values. Suggests that changes are needed in the images used to describe development, especially the use of developmentally ordered stages. Maintains that the light spectrum is the most promising reconceptualization of artistic development because it captures…
Descriptors: Art, Children, Childrens Art, Developmental Psychology
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Mishara, Brian L. – Human Development, 1996
Analyzes suicide in terms of a dynamic model of changes in suicidal tendencies over time. Suggests that minor fluctuations may incite rapid development toward suicide or inhabit suicidality. Notes that this method of analysis and developmental modeling is applicable to other phenomena involving development in complex human behaviors in an open…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Change, Child Development
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Campbell, Robert L. – Human Development, 1996
Discusses Mishara's use of phrase space analysis to chart the developmental dynamics of suicide. Contends that developmentalists should concern themselves with mental ontology, especially epistemic questions, in order to advance understanding of the development of the human mind. Considers the affinity of interactivism with a dynamic systems…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Change, Child Development
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