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Showing 211 to 225 of 372 results Save | Export
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Nazzaro, Jean N.; And Others – Journal of General Psychology, 1971
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Color, Cues
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Light, P. H.; MacIntosh, E. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1980
Young children drew two opaque objects placed one behind the other. Over two-thirds of the children drew the objects separately in horizontal or vertical relationships. When drawing an object in a glass beaker, half of the children depicted the object vertically or horizontally separate from the beaker. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Childrens Art, Cognitive Development, Cues, Depth Perception
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Sandberg, Elisabeth Hollister; And Others – Child Development, 1996
Two studies of development of spatial representation with two dimensions found that children as young as five years use the same two independent dimensions in fine-grained spatial coding of location in a circle as adults use--radius and angle. The adult pattern, where angle as well as radius is coded hierarchically, emerges by nine years. (HTH)
Descriptors: Adults, Classification, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation
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Strayer, Janet – Child Development, 1993
Examined children's emotional and cognitive responses to emotionally evocative vignettes. Results indicated age-related increases in children's responses. Found limited increases with age in children's concordant emotions, or emotions identical to emotions of persons in the vignettes, and continuous increases with age in children's attributions…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
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O'Neill, Daniela K.; Gopnik, Alison – Developmental Psychology, 1991
Children either saw, were told about, or felt the contents of a toy tunnel. They were asked what was in the tunnel and how they knew the contents. Three year olds had difficulty identifying the sources of their knowledge. Questions that involved inference proved to be especially difficult for them. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Epistemology, Foreign Countries
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Freire, Alejo; Lee, Kang – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Tested in two studies 4- to 7-year-olds' face recognition by manipulating the faces' configural and featural information. Found that even with only a single 5-second exposure, most children could use configural and featural cues to make identity judgments. Repeated exposure and feedback improved others' performance. Even proficient memories were…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Benoit, Laurent; Lehalle, Henri; Jouen, Francois – Cognitive Development, 2004
Two alternative hypotheses can be used to explain how young children acquire the cardinal meaning of small-number words. The first stresses the role of counting and predicts better performance when the items are presented in succession. The second considers the role of subitizing and predicts better performance when the items are presented…
Descriptors: Young Children, Hypothesis Testing, Numbers, Cognitive Development
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Lesser, Harvey – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1974
Attempts to clarify the basis for the unusual responses to observed movement by 7-year-old children, as compared to adults, discovered by Olum. Subjects were 40 first and third graders. Results indicate that these responses are genuine and that they go through a developmental evolution. (SDH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Elementary School Students
Collard, Roberta R.; Rydberg, Jean E. – 1972
A study was conducted to measure the degree to which groups of infants could generalize color across objects of different forms and sizes and generalize from across objects of different color and sizes and to see whether color or form would dominate in their generalizations. Ss were 8-13-month-old Caucasian infants. All tests had 16 Ss except the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Color, Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept)
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Fahrmeier, Edward D. – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1978
Early acquisition of right and left as absolute concepts does not seem to be related to early mastery of right and left as relative concepts among the Hausa. (Author)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
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Brodzinsky, David M.; And Others – Child Development, 1972
Results are discussed in terms of variables which may lead to the activation of cognitive structures during the transitional period. (Authors)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Cues, Data Analysis
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Chap, Janet Blum; Ross, Bruce M. – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1979
In order to determine whether mistakes committed by younger children are the result of retention mistakes rather than faulty perceptual encoding, twenty children (6, 8, 10, and 12 years old) reconstructed two visual patterns from immediate memory, while twenty other children (5 and 6 years old) reconstructed the identical patterns by direct…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Elementary School Students, Error Patterns
Carlin, Michael T.; Soraci, Sal A.; Dennis, Nancy A.; Strawbridge, Christina; Chechile, Nicholas A. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 2002
A study investigated the ability of six individuals with mental retardation to focus on task-relevant elements of complex visual arrays and increased visual-search efficiency. Results found participants were able to limit attention to the task-relevant items on a guided search task, thus greatly reducing overall target identification times.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Attention Control, Cognitive Development
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Schwarzer, Gudrun – Child Development, 2000
Examined degree to which analytic and holistic modes of processing play a role in children's and adults' categorization of faces. Found a developmental trend from analytic to holistic processing and an effect of face inversion with increasing age. Seven-year-olds processed faces comparably to nonfacial visual stimuli, whereas a growing proportion…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Classification
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Werker, Janet F.; Hall, D. Geoffrey; Fais, Laurel – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2004
U-shaped developmental functions, and their N-shaped cousins, have intrigued developmental psychologists for decades because they provide a compelling demonstration that development does not always entail a monotonic increase across age in a single underlying ability. Instead, the causes of development are much more complex. Indeed,…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Individual Development, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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