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McCormack, Teresa; Hanley, Mary – Cognitive Development, 2011
Four- and five-year-olds completed two sets of tasks that involved reasoning about the temporal order in which events had occurred in the past or were to occur in the future. Four-year-olds succeeded on the tasks that involved reasoning about the order of past events but not those that involved reasoning about the order of future events, whereas…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Children, Preschool Children, Task Analysis
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Aureli, Tiziana; Perucchini, Paola; Genco, Maria – Cognitive Development, 2009
Two tasks were administered to 40 children aged from 16 to 20 months (mean age = 18;1), to evaluate children's understanding of declarative and informative intention [Behne, T., Carpenter, M., & Tomasello, M. (2005). One-year-olds comprehend the communicative intentions behind gestures in a hiding game. "Developmental Science", 8, 492-499;…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Nonverbal Communication, Intention, Cognitive Ability
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Grafenhain, Maria; Behne, Tanya; Carpenter, Malinda; Tomasello, Michael – Cognitive Development, 2009
We investigated whether infants comprehend others' nonverbal communicative intentions directed to a third person, in an "overhearing" context. An experimenter addressed an assistant and indicated a hidden toy's location by either gazing ostensively or pointing to the location for her. In a matched control condition, the experimenter performed…
Descriptors: Cues, Interpersonal Communication, Infants, Comprehension
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Simon, Tony J.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1995
Investigates numerical competence in five-month-old infants using a violation-of-expectation paradigm. Supports previous findings that young children possess not only the competence for limited numerical abstraction, but also the ability to carry out addition and subtraction operations. An alternative explanation, that infants' responses are based…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Comprehension
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Richert, Rebekah A.; Lillard, Angeline S. – Cognitive Development, 2004
Discriminating what is pretense from what is real is a fundamental problem in development. Research has addressed the proficiency with which adults and children discriminate between play fighting and real fighting, and yet none (to our knowledge) has investigated discrimination of other kinds of pretense and real acts. In addition, little is known…
Descriptors: Cues, Cognitive Development, Social Cognition, Children
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Keenan, Thomas; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Previous research suggests that not until about age six do children recognize that one can gain knowledge through inferential rather than direct means. Three experiments were conducted in which important task information was made more salient to determine whether children's performance in previous research on their understanding of inference had…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Communication (Thought Transfer), Comprehension, Developmental Stages
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Booth, James R.; Hall, William S. – Cognitive Development, 1995
Investigated children's understanding of meaning of the cognitive verb "know" (as defined by an abstractness and conceptual difficulty hierarchy). Found that knowledge increased with development, and low levels of meaning were mastered before high levels, and more rapidly. Understanding in audio-taped stories was more difficult than in video-taped…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Psychology, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes