Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 0 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 0 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 2 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 4 |
Descriptor
| Inferences | 4 |
| Knowledge Level | 4 |
| Adults | 1 |
| Autism | 1 |
| Childhood Attitudes | 1 |
| Children | 1 |
| Classification | 1 |
| Cognitive Development | 1 |
| Communication Skills | 1 |
| Comparative Analysis | 1 |
| Context Effect | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
| Developmental Science | 4 |
Author
| Babineau, Mireille | 1 |
| Christophe, Anne | 1 |
| Cook, Claire | 1 |
| Havron, Naomi | 1 |
| Holyoak, Keith J. | 1 |
| Kampa, Alyssa | 1 |
| Morsanyi, Kinga | 1 |
| Papafragou, Anna | 1 |
| Sobel, David M. | 1 |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 4 |
| Reports - Research | 3 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
Education Level
| Early Childhood Education | 1 |
| Preschool Education | 1 |
Audience
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
| Raven Progressive Matrices | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Havron, Naomi; Babineau, Mireille; Christophe, Anne – Developmental Science, 2021
Infants are able to use the contexts in which familiar words appear to guide their inferences about the syntactic category of novel words (e.g. 'This is a' + 'dax' -> dax = object). The current study examined whether 18-month-old infants can rapidly adapt these expectations by tracking the distribution of syntactic structures in their input. In…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Familiarity, Inferences
Kampa, Alyssa; Papafragou, Anna – Developmental Science, 2020
Human communication relies on the ability to take into account the speaker's mental state to infer the intended meaning of an utterance in context. For example, a sentence such as 'Some of the animals are safe to pet' can be interpreted as giving rise to the inference 'Some and not all animals are safe to pet' when uttered by an expert. The same…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Interpersonal Communication, Pragmatics, Inferences
Cook, Claire; Sobel, David M. – Developmental Science, 2011
Four-year-olds, 6-year-olds, and adults were asked to make judgments about the reality status of four different types of machines: real machines that children and adults interact with on a daily basis, real machines that children and adults interact with rarely (if at all), and impossible machines that violated a real-world physical or biological…
Descriptors: Equipment, Classification, Young Children, Adults
Morsanyi, Kinga; Holyoak, Keith J. – Developmental Science, 2010
Recent studies (e.g. Dawson et al., 2007) have reported that autistic people perform in the normal range on the Raven Progressive Matrices test, a formal reasoning test that requires integration of relations as well as the ability to infer rules and form high-level abstractions. Here we compared autistic and typically developing children, matched…
Descriptors: Autism, Short Term Memory, Logical Thinking, Inferences

Peer reviewed
Direct link
