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Halford, Graeme S. – 1993
Cognitive development is driven by experience, but is mediated by domain general processes, which include learning, induction, and analogy. The concepts children understand, and the strategies they develop based on that understanding, depend on the complexity of the representation they can construct. Conceptual complexity can be defined in terms…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Halford, Graeme S. – 1991
The proposals concerning working memory outlined in this paper involve the architecture of working memory, the reasoning mechanisms that draw on it, and the ways in which working memory may develop with age. Ways of assessing task demands and children's working memory capacities are also considered. It is noted that there is long-standing evidence…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
Halford, Graeme S.; And Others – 1992
This paper describes a computer-simulation model of the way in which basic reasoning processes develop in children. The model, based on PRISM-II programming language, was designed to reflect the manner in which world knowledge can be used to construct strategies for reasoning. The model learns strategies for performing transitive inference by…
Descriptors: Analogy, Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development
Halford, Graeme S.; Stewart, J. E. M. – 1992
New conceptions of learning, analogy, and capacity have fundamentally changed scientists' view of cognitive development. New conceptions of learning help to explain how representations of the world are acquired. New models of analogical reasoning have suggested that logical inferences are often made by mapping a problem into a mental model, or…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Stages