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vanMarle, Kristy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Previous research has shown indirectly that infants may use two different mechanisms-an object tracking system and an analog magnitude mechanism--to represent small (less than 4) and large (greater than or equal to 4) numbers of objects, respectively. The current study directly tested this hypothesis in an ordinal choice task by presenting 10- to…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Psychology, Decision Making, Cognitive Processes
Sakkalou, Elena; Ellis-Davies, Kate; Fowler, Nia C.; Hilbrink, Elma E.; Gattis, Merideth – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Previous studies have reported that infants selectively reproduce observed actions and have argued that this selectivity reflects understanding of intentions and goals, or goal-directed imitation. We reasoned that if selective imitation of goal-directed actions reflects understanding of intentions, infants should demonstrate stability across…
Descriptors: Imitation, Infants, Goal Orientation, Experimental Psychology
Stolzenberg, Stacia; Pezdek, Kathy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Age differences in rates of forced confabulation and memory consequences thereof were assessed using a recall task similar to real forensic interview procedures. Children viewed a target video and were tested with the same 18 questions immediately afterward and 1 week later. Of the 18 questions, 12 were answerable; the 6 unanswerable questions…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Recall (Psychology), Age Differences, Video Technology
Ganea, Patricia A.; Harris, Paul L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Recent research has shown that by 30 months of age, children can successfully update their representation of an absent object's location on the basis of new verbal information, whereas 23-month-olds often return to the object's prior location. The current results show that this updating failure persisted even when (a) toddlers received visual and…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Toddlers, Verbal Ability, Visual Stimuli
Peets, Katlin; Hodges, Ernest V. E.; Salmivalli, Christina – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Children and adolescents encounter different hurtful experiences in school settings. How these events are processed (e.g., whether they think that the transgressor was hostile) is likely to depend on the relationship with the transgressor. In this study, we examined how adolescents (58 girls and 35 boys, mean age = 14.03 years, SD = 0.60) dealt…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Adolescents, Aggression
Boseovski, Janet J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Young children have been described as critical consumers of information, particularly in the domain of language learning. Indeed, children are more likely to learn novel words from people with accurate histories of object labeling than with inaccurate ones. But what happens when informant testimony conflicts with a tendency to see the world in a…
Descriptors: Young Children, Personality, Information Processing, Language Acquisition
Reijntjes, Albert; Thomaes, Sander; Kamphuis, Jan H.; Bushman, Brad J.; Reitz, Ellen; Telch, Michael J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
People often displace their anger and aggression against innocent targets, sometimes called scapegoats. Tragic historic events suggest that members of ethnic minority out-groups may be especially likely to be innocent targets. The current experiment examined displaced aggression of Dutch youths against Dutch in-group peers versus Moroccan…
Descriptors: Aggression, Negative Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Feedback (Response)
Badger, Julia R.; Shapiro, Laura R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
We examined whether inductive reasoning development is better characterized by accounts assuming an early category bias versus an early perceptual bias. We trained 264 children aged 3 to 9 years to categorize novel insects using a rule that directly pitted category membership against appearance. This was followed by an induction task with…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Classification, Children, Entomology
Blake, Peter R.; Ganea, Patricia A.; Harris, Paul L. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Children can identify owners either by seeing a person in possession of an object (a visual cue) and inferring that they are the owner or by hearing testimony about a claim of ownership (a verbal cue). A total of 391 children between 2.5 and 6 years of age were tested in three experiments assessing how children identify owners when these two cues…
Descriptors: Ownership, Toys, Cues, Social Experience
Rat-Fischer, Lauriane; O'Regan, J. Kevin; Fagard, Jacqueline – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Despite a growing interest in the question of tool-use development in infants, no study so far has systematically investigated how learning to use a tool to retrieve an out-of-reach object progresses with age. This was the first aim of this study, in which 60 infants, aged 14, 16, 18, 20, and 22 months, were presented with an attractive toy and a…
Descriptors: Infants, Toys, Observational Learning, Child Development
Haddad, Jeffrey M.; Claxton, Laura J.; Keen, Rachel; Berthier, Neil E.; Riccio, Gary E.; Hamill, Joseph; Van Emmerik, Richard E. A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Studies have suggested that proper postural control is essential for the development of reaching. However, little research has examined the development of the coordination between posture and manual control throughout childhood. We investigated the coordination between posture and manual control in children (7- and 10-year-olds) and adults during…
Descriptors: Human Posture, Psychomotor Skills, Child Development, Children
Chevalier, Nicolas; Wiebe, Sandra A.; Huber, Kristina L.; Espy, Kimberly Andrews – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
The current study addressed the role of switch detection in cognitive flexibility by testing the effect of transition cues (i.e., cues that directly signal the need to switch or maintain a given task goal) in a cued set-shifting paradigm at 5 years of age. Children performed better, especially on switch trials, when transition cues were combined…
Descriptors: Cues, Young Children, Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology
Purser, Harry R. M.; Jarrold, Christopher – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Individuals with Down syndrome tend to have a marked impairment of verbal short-term memory. The chief aim of this study was to investigate whether phonemic discrimination contributes to this deficit. The secondary aim was to investigate whether phonological representations are degraded in verbal short-term memory in people with Down syndrome…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Control Groups, Phonemics, Down Syndrome
Legare, Cristine H.; Mills, Candice M.; Souza, Andre L.; Plummer, Leigh E.; Yasskin, Rebecca – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
This study examined the strategic use of questions to solve problems across early childhood. Participants (N = 54, 4-, 5-, and 6-year-olds) engaged in two tasks: a novel problem-solving question task that required asking questions to an informant to determine which card in an array was located in a box and a cognitive flexibility task that…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Questioning Techniques, Young Children, Age Differences
Baltazar, Nicole C.; Shutts, Kristin; Kinzler, Katherine D. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Three experiments investigated whether a negativity bias in social perception extends to preschool-aged children's memory for the details of others' social actions and experiences. After learning about individuals who committed nice or mean social actions, children in Experiment 1 were more accurate at remembering who was mean compared with who…
Descriptors: Social Action, Social Cognition, Memory, Experiments