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Pasupathi, Monisha; Wainryb, Cecilia – Human Development, 2010
This paper poses the following question: When, in spite of knowing that it is wrong, people go on to hurt others, what does this mean for the development of moral agency? We begin by defining moral agency and briefly sketching relations between moral agency and other concepts. We then outline what three extant literatures suggest about this…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Social Theories, Experience, Models
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Rowell, J.A. – Human Development, 1983
Argues that the status of the concept of equilibration is classified by considering Piagetian theory as a research program in the sense elaborated in 1974 by Lakatos. A pilot study was made to examine the precision and testability of equilibration in Piaget's 1977 model.(Author/RH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cybernetics, Models
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Levitt, Mary J. – Human Development, 2005
Research on the development of social relations has been largely fragmented along role-specific lines and dominated conceptually by attachment theory. The Convoy Model is presented as an alternative to traditional approaches that fail to capture the complexity of social relationships across time and context. Research based on the model converges…
Descriptors: Models, Attachment Behavior, Interpersonal Relationship, Social Networks
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Dobert, Rainer; Nunner-Winkler, Gertrud – Human Development, 1985
Constructs a tentative stage model of the development of the understanding of suicide motives, based on interview data from 14- to 22-year-old male and female subjects of different SES backgrounds. Development is characterized by these trends: extension of time perspective; differentiation and individualization of actor schemata and motive…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Developmental Stages, Interpersonal Competence, Models
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Fein, Greta G.; And Others – Human Development, 1982
Children between the ages of 19 and 41 months were videotaped with a peer in a standardized playroom for four 15-minute sessions in order to examine a developmental model describing the relation between changes in pretense (pretend play, transformations, and communications) and changes in peer-oriented social behavior. (MP)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Models, Peer Relationship, Pretend Play
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Lewis, Marc D. – Human Development, 1995
Presents a model of cognition and emotion that suggests that feedback between cognition and emotion generates, maintains, and reconfigures interpretations of emotion-eliciting events at micro- and macrodevelopmental time scales and that personality and behavior self-organize in response to fluctuations in perception or cognition and trace…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Feedback, Individual Differences, Models
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Mumford, M.D.; Owens, W.A. – Human Development, 1984
Determines patterns of differential human development in a longitudinal study of 417 male and 358 female college students ages 18 to 30. Findings suggest individuality in development is associated with significant qualitative individual differences that are best described on a cross-time basis. (BJD)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Classification, Cohort Analysis, Individual Development
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Barrouillet, Pierre; Poirier, Louise – Human Development, 1997
Outlines Piaget's late ideas on categories and morphisms and the impact of these ideas on the comprehension of the inclusion relationship and the solution of arithmetic problems. Reports a study in which fourth through sixth graders were given arithmetic problems involving two known quantities associated with changes rather than states. Identified…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Classification, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages
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McGillicuddy-DeLisi, Ann V. – Human Development, 1982
Presents a model of mutual influences within the family which relates parental beliefs about developmental processes to parents' teaching practices. The model was tested by applying a path analysis to data on 120 families varying on number of children and educational level and age of parents. Results indicated differences between beliefs and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Age Differences, Beliefs, Child Development