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Harris, Paul L. – Human Development, 2011
Most research on children's conception of death has probed their understanding of its biological aspects: its inevitability, irreversibility and terminal impact. Yet many adults subscribe to a religious conception implying that death marks the beginning of a new life. Two recent empirical studies confirm that in the course of development, children…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Death, Children, Religion
Wainryb, Cecilia – Human Development, 2011
Approximately 300,000 child soldiers serve in various armed groups around the world, and become directly implicated in the perpetration of kidnappings, killings, and torture. Considering that children construct moral concepts and a sense of themselves as moral beings in the context of their everyday interactions with others, the concern with how…
Descriptors: Children, Military Personnel, Moral Development, Moral Values
Gummerum, Michaela; Hanoch, Yaniv; Keller, Monika – Human Development, 2008
Game theory has been one of the most prominent theories in the social sciences, influencing diverse academic disciplines such as anthropology, biology, economics, and political science. In recent years, economists have employed game theory to investigate behaviors relating to fairness, reciprocity, and trust. Surprisingly, this research has not…
Descriptors: Game Theory, Child Development, Interdisciplinary Approach, Developmental Psychology
Turiel, Elliot – Human Development, 2008
Lawrence Kohlberg first published details of his research on the development of moral judgments in "Vita Humana" (later titled "Human Development"). Along with a series of other articles and essays, he greatly influenced research on moral development. He was instrumental in moving the field out of the narrow confines of analyses of psychological…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Psychology, Researchers, Moral Development
Wellman, Henry M.; Miller, Joan G. – Human Development, 2008
While recognizing major contributions of the contemporary theory-of-mind framework, we identify conceptual and cultural gaps with respect to its inattention to deontic considerations. The framework has tended to portray behavior as purely self-directed, thereby neglecting everyday reasoners' understanding of behavior as normatively based. However,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Thinking Skills, Beliefs, Behavior Patterns
Keil, Frank C. – Human Development, 2007
The assumption of domain specificity has been invaluable to the study of the emergence of biological thought in young children. Yet, domains of thought must be understood within a broader context that explains how those domains relate to the surrounding cultures, to different kinds of cognitive constraints, to framing effects, to abilities to…
Descriptors: Biology, Cognitive Processes, Young Children, Child Development
Wells, Gordon – Human Development, 2007
Both Vygotsky, a psychologist, and Halliday, a social linguist, argue for the central role of language in human development. Language is the principal mode of meaning making; it mediates both the communication through which thinking with others is made possible and also the inner speech through which individual thinking is brought under conscious…
Descriptors: Inner Speech (Subvocal), Language Role, Cognitive Development, Classroom Communication

Sigel, I. E. – Human Development, 1984
Focusing on volitional, purposeful goal-oriented activity, this article explores the relationships between distancing strategies, representational competence, and action theory. (RH)
Descriptors: Child Development, Theories
Ginsburg, Herbert P. – Human Development, 2009
The developmental psychology of mathematical thinking and the clinical interview method can make major contributions to education by transforming the process of formative assessment--the attempt to use information concerning student performance, knowledge, learning potential, and motivation to inform instruction. The clinical interview is a…
Descriptors: Interviews, Mathematics Education, Student Evaluation, Formative Evaluation
Greeno, James G.; Saxe, Geoffrey B. – Human Development, 2007
In Giyoo Hatano's passing, we have lost an esteemed colleague and a treasured friend. Among his many contributions to our field, our work, and our lives, we honor and build on his and his colleagues' work on conceptual growth. We liken the view developed by Hatano and his colleagues to Toulmin's evolutionary scheme for understanding conceptual…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Concept Formation, Children, Child Development
Mahalingam, Ramaswami – Human Development, 2007
This paper synthesizes two perspectives on essentialism: cognitive and social. The cognitive essentialist perspective argues that our bias to appeal to the psychological belief that categories have innate essences enables us to make inferences about social categories such as race, caste, and gender. The social essentialist perspective argues that…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Sociology, Inferences, Child Development

Acredolo, Linda P.; Acredolo, Curt – Human Development, 1979
Briefly describes similarities and differences between the 1977 and the 1979 meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development. Mentions key topics, speakers, and program innovations at the 1979 meeting. (SS)
Descriptors: Child Development, Conferences, Developmental Psychology, Program Content

Overton, Willis F. – Human Development, 1997
Notes the self-conscious reflection that emerges in the fifth edition of the "Handbook of Child Psychology." Identifies several dichotomies in developmental psychology, such as change as variational or transformational, and sees these dichotomies in the context of modernist and postmodernist attitudes. Suggests that developmental…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Intellectual History, Modernism
Waxman, Sandra; Medin, Douglas – Human Development, 2007
This paper builds on Hatano and Inagaki's pioneering work on the role of experience and cultural models in children's biological reasoning. We use a category-based induction task to consider how experience and cultural models shape rural and urban children's patterns of biological reasoning. We discuss the implications of these findings for…
Descriptors: Urban Youth, Educational Practices, Children, Experience

Cahan, Emily D.; White, Sheldon H. – Human Development, 1997
The lineage of developmental psychology has involved three waves of research in the 1890s (Hall), 1930s, and 1960s (Piaget). Over these years, a cooperative knowledge-building process arose, fostered by new journals in the 1930s, in which articles built upon one another and sustained or redirected trains of thought among a community of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Intellectual History, Periodicals