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Richards, Jennifer; Hartlin, Stephanie; Moore, Chris; Corbit, John – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2023
Young children tend to behave more generously when their actions are identified than when they are anonymous, yet we know little about the cognitive foundations required for anonymity to impact generosity. In three studies we examined Canadian children's understanding of anonymity and its impact on sharing in anonymous and identified contexts.…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Sharing Behavior, Age Differences, Foreign Countries
Marion Gardier; Christina Léonard; Marie Geurten – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
Recent research has highlighted the critical role in children's cognitive development of the metacognitive support parents give their children during everyday interactions. Our main goal was to examine whether parents made consistent use of metacognitive talk across different parent - child interaction contexts and to document the effect of this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parent Child Relationship, Preschool Children, Metacognition
Luísa A. Ribeiro; Enrica Donolato; Cecília Aguiar; Nadine Correia; Henrik D. Zachrisson – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
The aim of this study was to summarize evidence about the relations between parent math support in children aged 3-5 years (from several countries in America, Asia, and Europe) and concurrent and longitudinal math outcomes. The (bio)ecological model of human development guided our hypotheses. The design and reporting of this meta-analysis used the…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Mathematics, Parents, Parent Child Relationship
Kelly S. Mix; Angelica Alonso; Jung-Jung Lee; Milagros Urioste-Resta; Natasha Cabrera; Stephanie Reich – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
The present study examined patterns of number-related utterances and actions directed to 9-month-old infants by their parents. An ethnically and economically diverse sample of 86 families participated in structured play sessions conducted separately with the mothers and fathers of each infant. Data were coded for eight math talk categories, and…
Descriptors: Parents, Infants, Parent Child Relationship, Numeracy
Carolyn Palmquist; Robyn Kondrad – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
Three-year-olds often respond to lies as if they were true or with no clear rationale. Individual differences influence children's processing of misinformation. Here, we explore how two contextual cues (children's conflicting first-hand knowledge and different information sources) affect their ability to correctly interpret and respond to…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Misinformation, Comparative Analysis, Decision Making
Hilary E. Miller-Goldwater; Melanie H. Hanft; Alissa G. Miller; Patricia J. Bauer – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
One way to support young children's factual learning is through shared book reading (reading books with a knowledgeable other). Many books that teach factual content are narrative in structure, in which factual content is embedded within a fictional storyline. However, there are gaps in our understanding of factors influencing children's factual…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Child Caregivers, Science Education, Text Structure
Baumann, Anna-Elisabeth; Goldman, Elizabeth J.; Meltzer, Alexandra; Poulin-Dubois, Diane – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2023
In this paper, we investigated whether Canadian preschoolers prefer to learn from a competent robot over an incompetent human using the classic trust paradigm. An adapted Naive Biology task was also administered to assess children's perception of robots. In Study 1, 3-year-olds and 5-year-olds were presented with two informants; A social, humanoid…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Trust (Psychology), Robotics, Foreign Countries
Scott, Katharine E.; King, Rachel Ann; Cochrane, Aaron; Kalish, Charles; Shutts, Kristin – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2023
The present research evaluated whether behavioral tasks ("direct assessments") commonly used to assess young children's social cognitive development in laboratory studies could have utility for measuring and predicting U.S. children's outcomes in educational contexts. To do so, children (N = 95; 49 boys, 46 girls; 41.05% White, 16.84%…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Interpersonal Competence, Grade Prediction, Academic Achievement
Jennifer Van Reet – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
Pretend play is often hypothesized in a global sense to be an effective context for young children's learning, but there is much still to learn about whether all types of information can be learned equally and whether all types of pretend play are equally beneficial. The present study tests whether preschoolers can learn a simple, novel causal…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preschool Education, Play, Conventional Instruction
Sohail, Sifana; Dunfield, Kristen A.; Chernyak, Nadia – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
By the preschool age, children exhibit a diversity of prosocial behaviors that include both sharing resources and helping others. Though recent work has theorized that these prosocial behaviors are differentiated by distinct ages of emergence, developmental trajectories and underlying mechanisms, the experimental evidence in support of the last…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Computation, Sharing Behavior, Helping Relationship
Thompson, Brittany N.; Goldstein, Thalia R. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
Pretend play is an important, universal activity of early childhood, but research to date contains multiple inconsistencies in definitions and measurement of pretend play. To begin to resolve this issue, we conducted a first study of the multiple different behaviors of pretend play in the preschool years (3-5 years), and investigated their…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Play, Behavior Patterns, Child Development
Lakusta, Laura; Wodzinski, Alaina; Landau, Barbara – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2021
Support (one object preventing another from falling) is linguistically encoded by adults and children in a highly structured and differentiated way, with basic locative expressions or Light verbs (e.g., in English, the block is "on/put" on the box) encoding Support-from-Below, and lexical verbs (e.g., she "stuck" the block on…
Descriptors: Verbs, Form Classes (Languages), Language Usage, Preschool Children
Branyan, Helen; Cooper, Elisheva; Shaki, Samuel; McCrink, Koleen – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2023
During the preschool years, children are simultaneously undergoing a reshaping of their mental number line and becoming increasingly sensitive to the social norms expressed by those around them. In the current study, 4- and 5-year-old American and Israeli children were given a task in which an experimenter laid out chips with numbers (1-5),…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Memory, Spatial Ability, Number Concepts
Read, Kirsten; Padula, Lily; Piacentini, Julia; Vo, Vivian – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
Rhyme awareness is a varied skill emerging consistently only in late preschool, yet children respond to rhythmic and phonological patterns to spontaneously complete rhymes in everyday settings. Our study replicates and extends previous work using a modified preferential looking task to test whether preschoolers can efficiently use rhyme to…
Descriptors: Rhyme, Preschool Children, Listening, Attention
Brandone, Amanda C.; Stout, Wyntre – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2023
A growing body of literature has established longitudinal associations between key social cognitive capacities emerging in infancy and children's subsequent theory of mind. However, existing work is limited by modest sample sizes, narrow infant measures, and theory of mind assessments with restricted variability and generalizability. The current…
Descriptors: Infants, Social Cognition, Theory of Mind, Intention