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Cohn, Neil – Human Development, 2012
Both drawing and language are fundamental and unique to humans as a species. Just as language is a representational system that uses systematic sounds (or manual/bodily signs) to express concepts, drawing is a means of "graphically" expressing concepts. Yet, unlike language, we consider it normal for people not to learn to draw, and consider those…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Language, Cognitive Development, Language Acquisition
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Gauvain, Mary; Munroe, Robert L. – Human Development, 2012
Differential cognitive performance across cultural contexts has been a standard result in comparative research. Here we discuss how societal changes occurring when a small-scale traditional community incorporates elements from industrialized society may contribute to cognitive development, and we illustrate this with an analysis of the cognitive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cultural Context, Social Change, Children
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Harris, Paul L. – Human Development, 2011
Most research on children's conception of death has probed their understanding of its biological aspects: its inevitability, irreversibility and terminal impact. Yet many adults subscribe to a religious conception implying that death marks the beginning of a new life. Two recent empirical studies confirm that in the course of development, children…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Death, Children, Religion
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Vergnaud, Gerard – Human Development, 2009
The theory of conceptual fields is a developmental theory. It has two aims: (1) to describe and analyse the progressive complexity, on a long- and medium-term basis, of the mathematical competences that students develop inside and outside school, and (2) to establish better connections between the operational form of knowledge, which consists in…
Descriptors: Individual Development, Epistemology, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation
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Becker, Joe – Human Development, 2008
Philosophers and scientists seeking to conceptualize consciousness, and subjective experience in particular, have focused on sensation and perception, and have emphasized binding--how a percept holds together. Building on a constructivist approach to conception centered on separistic-holistic complexes incorporating multiple levels of abstraction,…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Concept Formation, Abstract Reasoning, Intention
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Wellman, Henry M.; Miller, Joan G. – Human Development, 2008
While recognizing major contributions of the contemporary theory-of-mind framework, we identify conceptual and cultural gaps with respect to its inattention to deontic considerations. The framework has tended to portray behavior as purely self-directed, thereby neglecting everyday reasoners' understanding of behavior as normatively based. However,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Thinking Skills, Beliefs, Behavior Patterns
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Gestsdottir, Steinunn; Lerner, Richard M. – Human Development, 2008
Adolescence is a period of marked change in the person's cognitive, physical, psychological, and social development and in the individual's relations with the people and institutions of the social world. These changes place adaptational demands on adolescents, ones involving relations between their actions upon the context and the action of the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Social Development, Adolescent Development, Cognitive Development
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Keil, Frank C. – Human Development, 2007
The assumption of domain specificity has been invaluable to the study of the emergence of biological thought in young children. Yet, domains of thought must be understood within a broader context that explains how those domains relate to the surrounding cultures, to different kinds of cognitive constraints, to framing effects, to abilities to…
Descriptors: Biology, Cognitive Processes, Young Children, Child Development
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Wells, Gordon – Human Development, 2007
Both Vygotsky, a psychologist, and Halliday, a social linguist, argue for the central role of language in human development. Language is the principal mode of meaning making; it mediates both the communication through which thinking with others is made possible and also the inner speech through which individual thinking is brought under conscious…
Descriptors: Inner Speech (Subvocal), Language Role, Cognitive Development, Classroom Communication
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Ginsburg, Herbert P. – Human Development, 2009
The developmental psychology of mathematical thinking and the clinical interview method can make major contributions to education by transforming the process of formative assessment--the attempt to use information concerning student performance, knowledge, learning potential, and motivation to inform instruction. The clinical interview is a…
Descriptors: Interviews, Mathematics Education, Student Evaluation, Formative Evaluation
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Waxman, Sandra; Medin, Douglas – Human Development, 2007
This paper builds on Hatano and Inagaki's pioneering work on the role of experience and cultural models in children's biological reasoning. We use a category-based induction task to consider how experience and cultural models shape rural and urban children's patterns of biological reasoning. We discuss the implications of these findings for…
Descriptors: Urban Youth, Educational Practices, Children, Experience
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Goodnow, Jacqueline J.; Peterson, Candi; Lawrence, Jeanette A. – Human Development, 2007
To bring out Giyoo Hatano's contributions to the understanding of culture and cognitive development, we note first his special style--thoughtful, inventive, and always focused on central issues and on combining theory with data--and then, for three areas, some of the conceptual advances he proposed. The areas have to do with ties between cognitive…
Descriptors: Social Development, Cognitive Development, Cultural Context, Skills
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Becker, Joe – Human Development, 2004
Constructivist theory must choose between the hypothesis that felt perturbation drives cognitive development (the priority of felt perturbation) and the hypothesis that the particular process that eventually produces new cognitive structures first produces felt perturbation (the continuity of process). There is ambivalence in Piagetian theory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Consciousness Raising, Cognitive Structures
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Overton, Willis F.; Ennis, Michelle D. – Human Development, 2006
Historically, cognitive-developmental and behavior-analytic approaches to the study of human behavior change and development have been presented as incompatible alternative theoretical and methodological perspectives. This presumed incompatibility has been understood as arising from divergent sets of metatheoretical assumptions that take the form…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, World Views, Behavior Change, Research Methodology
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Hammock, Elizabeth A. D.; Levitt, Pat – Human Development, 2006
The study of neurobehavioral development focuses on the mechanisms through which the experiences of an individual influence the ontogeny of brain circuits that ultimately control complex functions, such as social engagement, mood and emotional regulation and cognition. Advances in experimental approaches and technologies provide opportunities to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Neuropsychology, Neurological Organization, Cognitive Development