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Child Development | 6 |
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Bacon, Joshua | 1 |
Bryant, Peter | 1 |
Kerpelman, Larry C. | 1 |
Koenigsberg, Riki Sharfman | 1 |
Millar, Susanna | 1 |
Mix, Kelly S. | 1 |
Prather, P A | 1 |
Pratt, Chris | 1 |
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Journal Articles | 3 |
Reports - Research | 3 |
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Koenigsberg, Riki Sharfman – Child Development, 1973
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Character Recognition, Discrimination Learning, Preschool Children

Pratt, Chris; Bryant, Peter – Child Development, 1990
Results of three experiments suggest that, in contrast to the claims made by Wimmer and others (1988), three- and four-year-old children understand that looking leads to knowing. The three- and four-year-olds' difficulty in the study lay mainly in the form of the questions that they were asked. (RH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Comprehension, Concept Formation, Foreign Countries

Millar, Susanna – Child Development, 1972
Results showed that instructions significantly increased recognition accuracy. (Author/MB)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Preschool Children, Recognition, Responses

Prather, P A; Bacon, Joshua – Child Development, 1986
Describes preschool children's ability to simultaneously perceive multiple aspects of an object in two experiments during which three- to five-year-olds were asked to describe part/whole pictures. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Metacognition, Perceptual Development, Pictorial Stimuli

Mix, Kelly S.; And Others – Child Development, 1996
Investigated the ability of three- and four-year-old children to perform tasks which require matching sets of sounds to numerically equivalent visual displays. Findings indicated that three-year-olds performed at the level of chance on the auditory-visual matching task, but four-year-olds performed significantly above chance. (MOK)
Descriptors: Acoustics, Classification, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Measurement

Kerpelman, Larry C. – Child Development, 1967
Four-, five-, and six-year-old children were used as subjects in this investigation. There were 192 experimental and 96 control children used, divided equally between the three age groups. The experimental children received a 1-minute pretest exposure procedure in which 1/4 of the children observed 4 two-dimensional stimuli (irregular pentagons),…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Discrimination Learning, Grade 1, Kindergarten Children