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Guajardo, Nicole R.; Parker, Jessica; Turley-Ames, Kandi – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2009
The primary purposes of the present study were to clarify previous work on the association between counterfactual thinking and false belief performance to determine (1) whether these two variables are related and (2) if so, whether executive function skills mediate the relationship. A total of 92 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds completed false belief,…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Beliefs
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Merten, Katharina; Nieder, Andreas – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
There is general agreement that nonverbal animals and humans endowed with language possess an evolutionary precursor system for representing and comparing numerical values. However, whether nonverbal numerical representations in human and nonhuman primates are quantitatively similar and whether linear or logarithmic coding underlies such magnitude…
Descriptors: Scaling, Animals, Brain, Comparative Analysis
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Scott, Rose M.; Baillargeon, Renee – Child Development, 2009
Recent research has shown that infants as young as 13 months can attribute false beliefs to agents, suggesting that the psychological-reasoning subsystem necessary for attributing reality-incongruent informational states (Subsystem-2, SS2) is operational in infancy. The present research asked whether 18-month-olds' false-belief reasoning extends…
Descriptors: Infants, Toddlers, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes
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Daum, Moritz M.; Vuori, Maria T.; Prinz, Wolfgang; Aschersleben, Gisa – Developmental Science, 2009
The present study applied a preferential looking paradigm to test whether 6- and 9-month old infants are able to infer the size of a goal object from an actor's grasping movement. The target object was a cup with the handle rotated either towards or away from the actor. In two experiments, infants saw the video of an actor's grasping movement…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Infants, Cognitive Development, Video Technology
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Lewis, Charlie; Carpendale, Jeremy I. M. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
The term executive function is used increasingly within developmental psychology and is often taken to refer to unfolding brain processes. We trace the origins of research on executive function to show that the link with social interaction has a long history. We suggest that a recent frenzy of research exploring methods for studying individual…
Descriptors: Autism, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Developmental Psychology
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Apperly, Ian A.; Warren, Frances; Andrews, Benjamin J.; Grant, Jay; Todd, Sophie – Child Development, 2011
On belief-desire reasoning tasks, children first pass tasks involving true belief before those involving false belief, and tasks involving positive desire before those involving negative desire. The current study examined belief-desire reasoning in participants old enough to pass all such tasks. Eighty-three 6- to 11-year-olds and 20 adult…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Developmental Continuity, Cognitive Development, Child Development
Dixon, Raymond Anthony – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Research shows that mental representation such as analogical reasoning is a fundamental cognitive tool for design problem solving (Daugherty & Mentzer, 2008; Hey, Lensey, Agogino, & Wood, 2008; Lewis, 2008). Not much is known, however, about the way students and professional engineers actively generate and change their mental representation when…
Descriptors: Expertise, Metacognition, Logical Thinking, Engineering
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Segalowitz, Sidney J.; Santesso, Diane L.; Jetha, Michelle K. – Brain and Cognition, 2010
While psychological research has long shown that adolescence is a period of major cognitive and affective transition, recent neurophysiological research has shown that adolescence is also accompanied by observable maturational changes in the brain, both in terms of structure and neurotransmitter function. Given this situation, we would expect that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Physiology, Adolescents, Behavior Change
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Kabael, Tangul Uygur – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2010
The derivative of a composite function, taken with the chain rule is one of the important notions in calculus. This paper describes a study conducted in Turkey that shows that the chain rule was given with the formula in function notation and/or the Leibniz notation without relating these formulas to life-related problem situations in the…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Foreign Countries, Learning Experience, Calculus
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Chevalier, Nicolas; Blaye, Agnes; Dufau, Stephane; Lucenet, Joanna – Developmental Psychology, 2010
This study investigated the visual information that children and adults consider while switching or maintaining object-matching rules. Eye movements of 5- and 6-year-old children and adults were collected with two versions of the Advanced Dimensional Change Card Sort, which requires switching between shape- and color-matching rules. In addition to…
Descriptors: Cues, Eye Movements, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development
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Libertus, Melissa E.; Pruitt, Laura B.; Woldorff, Marty G.; Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009
Behavioral studies show that infants are capable of discriminating the number of objects or events in their environment, while also suggesting that number discrimination in infancy may be ratio-dependent. However, due to limitations of the dependent measures used with infant behavioral studies, the evidence for ratio dependence falls short of the…
Descriptors: Infants, Discrimination Learning, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes
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Nishimura, Yukio; Morichika, Yosuke; Isa, Tadashi – Brain, 2009
Recent studies have shown that after partial spinal-cord lesion at the mid-cervical segment, the remaining pathways compensate for restoring finger dexterity; however, how they control hand/arm muscles has remained unclear. To elucidate the changes in dynamic properties of neural circuits connecting the motor cortex and hand/arm muscles, we…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Brain, Human Body, Psychomotor Skills
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Michel, Fiona; Anderson, Mike – Developmental Science, 2009
A number of authors have proposed models of cognitive development that explain improvements in intelligence over the course of childhood via changes in the efficiency of inhibitory processes (Anderson, 2001; Bjorklund & Harnishfeger, 1990; Dempster, 1991, 1992; Dempster & Corkill, 1999a; Harnishfeger, 1995; Harnishfeger & Bjorklund, 1993). A…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Inhibition, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Haun, Daniel B. M.; Call, Josep – Cognition, 2009
Recognizing relational similarity relies on the ability to understand that defining object properties might not lie in the objects individually, but in the relations of the properties of various object to each other. This aptitude is highly relevant for many important human skills such as language, reasoning, categorization and understanding…
Descriptors: Evolution, Figurative Language, Animals, Spatial Ability
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Bibok, Maximilian B.; Carpendale, Jeremy I. M.; Muller, Ulrich – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
Research has demonstrated that differential parental scaffolding utterances influence children's development of executive function. Traditional conceptualizations of scaffolding, though, have difficulty in explaining how such differential effects influence children's cognitive development; they do not account for the timing of parental utterances…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Preschool Children, Foreign Countries, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
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