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Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Cognition, 2002
Two experiments examined development of the ordinality concept in infants. Found that 11-month-olds successfully discriminated, whereas 9-month-olds failed to discriminate sequences that descended in numerical value from sequences increasing in numerical value. Nine-month-olds could discriminate the ordinal direction of sequences that varied in…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Cross Sectional Studies, Developmental Stages
Townes-Rosenwein, Linda – 1980
Two component skills of object permanence were studied: existence constancy -- the infants' ability to expect that an object continues to exist after it is hidden, and localization skill -- infants' ability to search in the correct place for a hidden object. Contradictions within the literature may occur because of task lability caused by failure…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infants, Object Permanence
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Friedman, Ruth – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1976
This article serves as a rejoinder to TM 502 436, focusing on the potential resilience of human cognitive growth. (DEP)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Infants
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Bell, Martha Ann; Fox, Nathan A. – Child Development, 1992
Examined the relationship between changes in electroencephalograms and the development of the ability to perform cognitive tasks involving frontal lobe functioning in infants of 7 to 12 months of age. Infants who successfully found a hidden object showed changes in the power of brain electrical activity in the frontal lobe. (BC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Electroencephalography, Infants, Primatology
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Bahrick, Lorraine E.; Netto, Dianelys; Hernandez-Reif, Maria – Child Development, 1998
Investigated 4- and 7-month olds' matching of unfamiliar, dynamic faces and voices on basis of age or maturity. Found significant matching at both ages; infant's prior experience with children appeared to facilitate matching at 7 months. Also found visual preference for children's faces. Another experiment assessed matching by 7-month olds, only…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Infants
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Rakison, D.H. – Cognition, 2005
Three experiments with a novel variation of the inductive generalization procedure examined 18- and 22-month-olds' knowledge of objects' motion properties. Infants observed simple air and land movements modeled with an appropriate category member (e.g. dog) or an ambiguous block and were allowed to imitate with one or more of four exemplars. The…
Descriptors: Motion, Infants, Generalization, Cognitive Development
Halle, Tamara; Forry, Nicole; Hair, Elizabeth; Perper, Kate; Wandner, Laura; Wessel, Julia; Vick, Jessica – Child Trends, 2009
Education and business leaders as well as the public at large have grown increasingly concerned about the achievement disparities that children from at-risk backgrounds manifest at a young age. Early childhood initiatives that take into account the entire preschool period of 0 to 5 years need a better understanding of the disparities which may be…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Child Development, Emergent Literacy, Cohort Analysis
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Scott-Little, Catherine; Kagan, Sharon Lynn; Frelow, Victoria Stebbins; Reid, Jeanne – Infants and Young Children, 2009
Early learning guidelines (ELGs)--documents that describe the skills, characteristics, and dispositions adults seek to foster in young children--are increasingly common. Although less prevalent than ELGs for 3- and 4-year-old children, ELGs for infants and toddlers have been developed in more than half of the 50 states. Given this momentum, a…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Disabilities, Physical Development
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Mandler, Jean M. – American Psychologist, 2007
Contrary to the conventional view of infancy as a sensorimotor period without conceptual thought, research over the past 20 years has shown that preverbal infants are capable of at least 3 conceptual functions: forming concepts with which to interpret the world, recall of the past, and engaging in conceptual generalization. Research is described…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Infants, Recall (Psychology), Concept Formation
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Schulze, Pamela A.; Carlisle, Sunny A. – Early Child Development and Care, 2010
The authors review the research literature on breastfeeding benefits and promotion. Although breastfeeding confers numerous benefits to infants, mothers and society, the authors conclude that breastfeeding promotion efforts sometimes overstate or misrepresent what the research actually supports about the benefits of breastfeeding. Psychological or…
Descriptors: Body Weight, Mothers, Infants, Nutrition
Ramey, Craig T.; Ramey, Sharon L. – 1999
To help parents of infants understand the issues at the core of current advice and trends on parenting, this guide provides information about recent research on early learning, communication, social skills, and emotional growth from birth to 18 months. The guide also focuses on how growth, learning, social interactions, emotional development, and…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Caregivers, Child Development, Child Rearing
Bakeman, Roger; Brown, Josephine V. – 1977
This study investigated: (1) the effects of early mother-infant interaction on the infant's cognitive and social development during the first year of life; (2) the impact of perinatal factors on that development; and (3) the differences, if any, in the impact of mother-infant interaction and perinatal factors on preterm and full term infants.…
Descriptors: Black Mothers, Cognitive Development, Infants, Low Income
Fein, Greta G.; Apfel, Nancy H. – 1975
This study examined the extent to which situational context differentially influences components of play. Two groups of play variables were distinguished: (1) style variables, (reflecting the overall tempo and diversity of play) and viewed as relatively sensitive indicators of short term reactions of situations; and (2) structural variables,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants
Pedersen, Frank A.; And Others – 1973
This document reports a study investigating the effects of father absence on measures of cognitive, social, and motivational development in infancy. The sample included 54 black infants, 27 of whom were classified "father-absent." This classification was based on two indices, (1) a dichotomy of father-absent or father-present based on…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Fatherless Family
Leiderman, Herbert P.; And Others – 1972
Sixty-five Kikuyu infants were developmentally evaluated (Bayley Test) at two-month intervals during the first year of life. Precocity was demonstrated for mental as well as motor test performance. Familial economic status was positively related to infant performance. Social and demographic variables contributed at least 25% to test score…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Cognitive Development, Demography, Family Life
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