Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 0 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 1 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 1 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 6 |
Descriptor
Inferences | 7 |
Probability | 7 |
Preschool Children | 3 |
Adults | 2 |
Age Differences | 2 |
Cognitive Development | 2 |
Conditioning | 2 |
Developmental Psychology | 2 |
Infants | 2 |
Logical Thinking | 2 |
Thinking Skills | 2 |
More ▼ |
Source
Developmental Psychology | 7 |
Author
Denison, Stephanie | 3 |
Gopnik, Alison | 2 |
Xu, Fei | 2 |
Bonawitz, Elizabeth Baraff | 1 |
Doan, Tiffany | 1 |
Evans, Jonathan St. B. T. | 1 |
Friedman, Ori | 1 |
Handley, Simon J. | 1 |
Kushnir, Tamar | 1 |
Lombrozo, Tania | 1 |
McKenzie, Rebecca | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 7 |
Reports - Research | 6 |
Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
Education Level
Early Childhood Education | 1 |
Preschool Education | 1 |
Audience
Location
California | 1 |
Canada | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Doan, Tiffany; Stonehouse, Emily; Denison, Stephanie; Friedman, Ori – Developmental Psychology, 2022
In pursuing goals, people seek favorable odds. We investigated whether young children use this fact to infer goals from people's actions across two experiments on Canadian 3- to 7-year-old children (N = 316; 167 girls, 149 boys). Participants' demographic information was not formally collected, but the region is predominantly middle-class and…
Descriptors: Young Children, Inferences, Probability, Vignettes
Denison, Stephanie; Reed, Christie; Xu, Fei – Developmental Psychology, 2013
How do people make rich inferences from such sparse data? Recent research has explored this inferential ability by investigating probabilistic reasoning in infancy. For example, 8- and 11-month-old infants can make inferences from samples to populations and vice versa (Denison & Xu, 2010a; Xu & Denison, 2009; Xu & Garcia, 2008a). The…
Descriptors: Probability, Infants, Inferences, Young Children
Bonawitz, Elizabeth Baraff; Lombrozo, Tania – Developmental Psychology, 2012
A growing literature suggests that generating and evaluating explanations is a key mechanism for learning and inference, but little is known about how children generate and select competing explanations. This study investigates whether young children prefer explanations that are simple, where simplicity is quantified as the number of causes…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preferences, Inferences, Probability
Denison, Stephanie; Trikutam, Pallavi; Xu, Fei – Developmental Psychology, 2014
A rich tradition in developmental psychology explores physical reasoning in infancy. However, no research to date has investigated whether infants can reason about physical objects that behave probabilistically, rather than deterministically. Physical events are often quite variable, in that similar-looking objects can be placed in similar…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Infants, Probability, Inferences
McKenzie, Rebecca; Evans, Jonathan St. B. T.; Handley, Simon J. – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Everyday conditional reasoning is typically influenced by prior knowledge and belief in the form of specific exceptions known as counterexamples. This study explored whether adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD; N = 26) were less influenced by background knowledge than typically developing adolescents (N = 38) when engaged in conditional…
Descriptors: Autism, Prior Learning, Adolescents, Probability
Kushnir, Tamar; Gopnik, Alison – Developmental Psychology, 2007
This study examines preschoolers' causal assumptions about spatial contiguity and how these assumptions interact with new evidence in the form of conditional probabilities. Preschoolers saw a toy that activated in the presence of certain objects. Children were shown evidence for the toy's activation rule in the form of patterns of probability: The…
Descriptors: Toys, Inferences, Probability, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
Schulz, Laura E.; Gopnik, Alison – Developmental Psychology, 2004
Five studies investigated (a) children's ability to use the dependent and independent probabilities of events to make causal inferences and (b) the interaction between such inferences and domain-specific knowledge. In Experiment 1, preschoolers used patterns of dependence and independence to make accurate causal inferences in the domains of…
Descriptors: Inferences, Biology, Cognitive Style, Probability