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Sobel, David M. – Developmental Science, 2006
Sobel and Lillard (2001 ) demonstrated that 4-year-olds' understanding of the role that the mind plays in pretending improved when children were asked questions in a fantasy context. The present study investigated whether this fantasy effect was motivated by children recognizing that fantasy contains violations of real-world causal structure. In…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Preschool Children, Personality, Cognitive Development
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Schulz, Laura E.; Gopnik, Alison; Glymour, Clark – Developmental Science, 2007
The conditional intervention principle is a formal principle that relates patterns of interventions and outcomes to causal structure. It is a central assumption of experimental design and the causal Bayes net formalism. Two studies suggest that preschoolers can use the conditional intervention principle to distinguish causal chains, common cause…
Descriptors: Research Design, Cues, Intervention, Preschool Children
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Abelev, Maxim; Markman, Ellen – Developmental Science, 2006
Evidence from theory-of-mind tasks suggests that young children have substantial difficulty thinking about multiple object identity and multiple versions of reality. On the other hand, evidence from children's understanding of pretense indicates that children have little trouble understanding dual object identity and counterfactual scenarios that…
Descriptors: Play, Young Children, Cognitive Development, Teaching Methods