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Didar Karadag; Marina Bazhydai; Gert Westermann – Developmental Science, 2024
Children actively and selectively transmit information to others based on the type of information and the context during learning. Four- to 7-year-old children preferentially transmit generalizable information in teaching-like contexts. Although 2-year-old children are able to distinguish between generalizable and non-generalizable information, it…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Information Transfer, Communication (Thought Transfer), Generalization
Werchan, Denise M.; Amso, Dima – Developmental Science, 2021
Previous work has shown that infants as young as 8 months of age can use certain features of the environment, such as the shape or color of visual stimuli, as cues to organize simple inputs into hierarchical rule structures, a robust form of reinforcement learning that supports generalization of prior learning to new contexts. However, especially…
Descriptors: Infants, Reinforcement, Bias, Stimuli
Gerken, LouAnn; Balcomb, Frances K.; Minton, Juliet L. – Developmental Science, 2011
Every environment contains infinite potential features and correlations among features, or patterns. Detecting valid and learnable patterns in one environment is beneficial for learners because doing so lends predictability to new environments where the same or analogous patterns recur. However, some apparent correlations among features reflect…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Patterns, Attention, Learning

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