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Peer reviewedDroit-Volet, Sylvie; Wearden, John H. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Trained 3-, 5-, and 8-year-olds in temporal bisection task, with nonstandard comparison stimuli spaced linearly between short or long standard visual stimuli. Statistical analyses and results from different theoretical models of the data all suggested that temporal sensitivity was higher in the 8-year-olds than in younger groups, even when the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedSutherland, Rachel; Hayne, Harlene – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Two experiments examined relation between age-related changes in retention and age-related changes in the misinformation effect. Found large age-related retention differences when participants were interviewed immediately and after 1 day, but after 6 weeks, differences were minimal. Exposure to misleading information increased commission errors.…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
Cherney, Isabelle D.; Seiwert, Clair S.; Dickey, Tara M.; Flichtbeil, Judith D. – Educational Psychology, 2006
Children's drawings are thought to be a mirror of a child's representational development. Research suggests that with age children develop more complex and symbolic representational strategies and reference points become more differentiated by gender. We collected two drawings from 109 5-13-year-old children (three age groups). Each child drew…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Gender Differences, Children
Kabadayi, Abdulkadir – Early Child Development and Care, 2006
Language, as is known, is acquired under certain conditions: rapid and sequential brain maturation and cognitive development, the need to exchange information and to control others' actions, and an exposure to appropriate speech input. This research aims at analyzing preschoolers' overgeneralizations of the object labeling process in different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cognitive Development, Internet, Generalization
Richland, Lindsey E.; Morrison, Robert G.; Holyoak, Keith J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
We explored how relational complexity and featural distraction, as varied in scene analogy problems, affect children's analogical reasoning performance. Results with 3- and 4-year-olds, 6- and 7-year-olds, 9- to 11-year-olds, and 13- and 14-year-olds indicate that when children can identify the critical structural relations in a scene analogy…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Error Patterns, Cognitive Development, Children
Ellefson, Michelle R.; Shapiron, Laura R.; Chater, Nick – Cognitive Development, 2006
Switching between tasks produces decreases in performance as compared to repeating the same task. Asymmetrical switch costs occur when switching between two tasks of unequal difficulty. This asymmetry occurs because the cost is greater when switching to the less difficult task than when switching to the more difficult task. Various theories about…
Descriptors: Children, Difficulty Level, Adults, Age Differences
Deneault, Joane; Ricard, Marcelle – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2006
This study investigated the development of the understanding of class inclusion in children age 5, 7, and 9 years, whose performance on a qualitative class-inference task assessing their appreciation of the transitive and asymmetrical nature of inclusive relations within the animal domain was compared with their ability to make quantitative…
Descriptors: Children, Inferences, Cognitive Development, Age Differences
Mulligan, Neil W.; Lozito, Jeffrey P.; Rosner, Zachary A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Generation enhances memory for occurrence but may not enhance other aspects of memory. The present study further delineates the negative generation effect in context memory reported in N. W. Mulligan (2004). First, the negative generation effect occurred for perceptual attributes of the target item (its color and font) but not for extratarget…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Age Differences, Memory, Color
Cooper, Carey E.; Crosnoe, Robert; Suizzo, Marie-Anne; Pituch, Keenan A. – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Using multilevel models of data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Kindergarten Cohort (N = 20,356), the authors find that parental involvement in education partially mediates the association between family poverty and children's math and reading achievement in kindergarten, but differences exist across race. In Asian families, poor and…
Descriptors: African American Children, Racial Differences, Poverty, Reading Achievement
Singer, Janice – 1993
This paper presents three experiments examining competence in the domain of proportional reasoning in several age groups (adult, and children in kindergarten, first, third, and fifth grade). In the three experiments, subjects indicated which of two flower boxes had the greater density of flowers. In experiments 1 and 2, the flowers were presented…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
Pearce, Kathy A.; Denney, Nancy Wadsworth – 1983
Previous research in classification preference has focused on only a few selected age groups. To investigate the classification preferences of individuals from early childhood through old age in the same study, 144 individuals between the ages of 4 and 70 completed a revised version of the Conceptual Styles Test. Analysis of results showed that…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Age Differences, Children
Peer reviewedTighe, Thomas J.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1975
Two studies of 7-year-olds and college students tested the hypothesis of a developmental difference in the degree to which subjects' memory performance was controlled by categorical properties vs. specific instance properties of test items. (GO)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, College Students, Concept Formation
Emery, Olga B.; Breslau, Lawrence D. – 1986
For more than a decade it has been convention to assume that senile dementia Alzheimer's type (SDAT) and Alzheimer's disease early onset represent a unitary disease process with only an onset difference. This assumption has been neither confirmed nor disconfirmed. To address this issue, a study was conducted which analyzed the dissolution of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Diseases
Palacio-Quintin, Ercilia; Gelinas, Lorraine – 1986
A total of 80 children 4 to 7 years of age participated in a study attempting to establish (1) the frequency of classification performance by age and in relation to available classification criteria, and (2) the degree of preference for different classification criteria by age, particularly differences between figurative and operative criteria.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Development, Criteria
Howard, Lawrence – 1985
The way cognitive, event-related brain potentials (ERPs) can aid in further understanding of memory span change in children is discussed. ERPs are time-dependent changes in electrical activity of the brain (as recorded by scalp electrodes) following the presentation of a physical stimulus through auditory, visual, or somatosensory modalities. The…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Age Differences, Children

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