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Wass, S. V.; Scerif, G.; Johnson, M. H. – Developmental Review, 2012
Authors have argued that various forms of interventions may be more effective in younger children. Is cognitive training also more effective, the earlier the training is applied? We review evidence suggesting that functional neural networks, including those subserving attentional control, may be more unspecialised and undifferentiated earlier in…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Cognitive Development, Skill Development, Literature Reviews
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Best, John R.; Miller, Patricia H.; Jones, Lara L. – Developmental Review, 2009
Research and theorizing on executive function (EF) in childhood has been disproportionately focused on preschool age children. This review paper outlines the importance of examining EF throughout childhood, and even across the lifespan. First, examining EF in older children can address the question of whether EF is a unitary construct. The…
Descriptors: Research Needs, Children, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Development
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Richmond, Jenny; Nelson, Charles A. – Developmental Review, 2007
The medial temporal lobe memory system matures relatively early and supports rudimentary declarative memory in young infants. There is considerable development, however, in the memory processes that underlie declarative memory performance during infancy. Here we consider age-related changes in encoding, retention, and retrieval in the context of…
Descriptors: Infants, Brain, Memory, Cognitive Development
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Boom, Jan; ter Laak, Jan – Developmental Review, 2007
Latent class analysis (LCA) has been successfully applied to tasks measuring higher cognitive functioning, suggesting the existence of distinct strategies used in such tasks. With LCA it became possible to classify post hoc. This important step forward in modeling and analyzing cognitive strategies is relevant to the overlapping waves model for…
Descriptors: Children, Thinking Skills, Models, Short Term Memory
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Bouwmeester, Samantha; Vermunt, Jeroen K.; Sijtsma, Klaas – Developmental Review, 2007
Fuzzy trace theory explains why children do not have to use rules of logic or premise information to infer transitive relationships. Instead, memory of the premises and performance on transitivity tasks is explained by a verbatim ability and a gist ability. Until recently, the processes involved in transitive reasoning and memory of the premises…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Development, Classification, Individual Differences
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Courage, Mary L.; Howe, Mark L. – Developmental Review, 2004
Over the past three decades impressive progress has been made in documenting the development of encoding, storage, and retrieval processes in preverbal infants and children. This literature includes an extensive and diverse database as well as theoretical conjecture about the underlying processes that drive early memory development. A selective…
Descriptors: Memory, Infants, Children, Cognitive Development
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Roberts, Kim P. – Developmental Review, 2002
Outlines five perspectives addressing alternate aspects of the development of children's source monitoring: source-monitoring theory, fuzzy-trace theory, schema theory, person-based perspective, and mental-state reasoning model. Discusses research areas with relation to forensic developmental psychology: agent identity, prospective processing,…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Evidence (Legal), Expectation
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Munakata, Yuko – Developmental Review, 2004
Numerous brain areas work in concert to subserve memory, with distinct memory functions relying differentially on distinct brain areas. For example, semantic memory relies heavily on posterior cortical regions, episodic memory on hippocampal regions, and working memory on prefrontal cortical regions. This article reviews relevant findings from…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Memory, Neurology, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Steffler, Dorothy J. – Developmental Review, 2001
Addresses how existing theories of implicit cognition may contribute to the understanding of spelling development. Reviews adult literature on implicit memory and implicit learning that may be applied to spelling development. Presents a multilevel model of representational redescription from which to investigate the interrelation of implicit and…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Reese, Hayne W. – Developmental Review, 1999
Discusses motivations for research replications and makes recommendations for appropriate research strategies. Illustrates research strategies in a review of studies replicating a 1948 study by Soviet psychologist Z.M. Istomina on preschoolers' memory. Concludes that none of the studies closely replicated Istomina's methods, but some replicated…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Memory, Motivation, Preschool Children
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McCormack, Teresa; Hoerl, Christoph – Developmental Review, 1999
Proposes an account of the development of temporal understanding, linking it with episodic memory development. Distinguishes between ways of representing time in terms of frameworks involved; describes perspectival and nonperspectival frameworks and those representing recurrent sequences or particular times. Describes emergence of new kinds of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Egocentrism, Individual Development
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Hayne, Harlene – Developmental Review, 2004
When asked to recall their earliest personal memories, most children and adults have virtually no recollection of their infancy or early childhood. This phenomenon is commonly referred to as childhood amnesia. The fate of our earliest memories has puzzled psychologists for over 50 years, particularly in light of the importance of early experience…
Descriptors: Infants, Memory, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology
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Wright, Barlow C. – Developmental Review, 2001
Suggests an account of transitivity and transitive inferential reasoning differing from classic Piagetian and current information processing accounts. Postulates a three-component psychological system, with components relying on perceptual, linguistic, and conceptual subprocesses and sensitivity to simple cues. Maintains that the framework is…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development
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Schneider, Wolfgang; Sodian, Beate – Developmental Review, 1997
Reviews development of rehearsal and organizational strategies based on cross-sectional and longitudinal research, focusing on the Munich Longitudinal Study. Found that longitudinal data reveal greater individual variability in strategy acquisition, suggesting that canonical development patterns inferred from cross-sectional studies obfuscate…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cross Sectional Studies, Individual Development