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Enns, James T.; Cameron, Sharon – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1987
Examined relationships between three components of tasks used in developmental studies of attention--visual search, filtering, and priming--as measured in tasks performed by children and adults. (PCB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Child Development, Foreign Countries
Caravolas, Marketa; Kessler, Brett; Hulme, Charles; Snowling, Margaret – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
This study investigated children's sensitivity to spelling consistency, and lexical and sublexical (rime) frequency, and their use of explicitly learned canonical vowel graphemes in the early stages of learning to spell. Vowel spellings produced by 78 British children at the end of reception year (mean age 5 years, 7 months) and 6 months later in…
Descriptors: Graphemes, Vowels, Spelling, Child Psychology

Krascum, Ruth M.; Andrews, Sally – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1993
Examined whether preschool children focus on a small number of attributes or attend to whole exemplars in learning basic categories for fictitious animals. Found little evidence that children employed rules, but found strong evidence that children encoded exemplars as integrated wholes during category training. Discusses implications for theories…
Descriptors: Child Development, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Landerl, Karin; Reitsma, Pieter – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
In Dutch, vowel duration spelling is phonologically consistent but morphologically inconsistent (e.g., "paar--paren"). In German, it is phonologically inconsistent but morphologically consistent (e.g., "Paar--Paare"). Contrasting the two orthographies allowed us to examine the role of phonological and morphological consistency…
Descriptors: Vowels, Spelling, Indo European Languages, Phonology
Lange-Kuttner, C. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
Pictorial space can be conceptualized as aggregate space (where figures compete for limited available space) or as axial space (where space is infinite and exists independently of figures). That these two kinds of space concepts follow a developmental sequence was tested by investigating size regulation mechanisms in 7- to 12-year-old children's…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Geometric Concepts, Children, Spatial Ability
Goswami, Usha; Ziegler, Johannes C.; Richardson, Ulla – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
Within alphabetic languages, spelling-to-sound consistency can differ dramatically. For example, English and German are very similar in their phonological and orthographic structure but not in their consistency. In English the letter "a" is pronounced differently in the words "bank," "ball," and "park,"…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, German, Reading Instruction, Phonology

Hayes, Brett K.; Taplin, John E. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1992
For both 6 and 11 year olds, social knowledge had a significant influence on test phase responses. It is maintained that the study clarifies the relationship between the use of knowledge-based and similarity-based information in children's acquisition of concepts. (BG)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Classification, Concept Formation