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Peer reviewedRichards, Ruth – New Directions for Child Development, 1996
Discusses creativity, play, and nonconformity in children, including the illusion of thought disorder or abnormality, and aspects of everyday creativity, health, and survival. Describes creative divergence, chaotic amplification, the evolution of information, and primitive cognitive processes. Concludes with a discussion of cognitive styles,…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style
Peer reviewedLee, Fiona; And Others – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1996
Research has shown that attributional styles are affected by the attributor's culture, inferential goals, and level of cognitive processing. This study compares the attributions made in sports articles and editorials of newspapers published in Hong Kong and the United States. Implications for the mixed model of social inference are discussed. (LSR)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Cultural Context, Inferences
Peer reviewedUnderwood, Geoffrey; Underwood, Jean D. M. – Reading, 1989
Discusses the extent to which computers can understand natural language. Considers assertions that computers can be described as literate, and considers more generally the purpose of designing machines which perform like humans. (RS)
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Processes, Computer Simulation
Peer reviewedSophian, Catherine; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1995
Two experiments studied preschool children's ability to infer numerosity from correspondence between two sets. Found that children were able to make inferences as early as three years of age. However, differences between the two conditions suggest production deficiencies in young children's use of counting as a problem-solving strategy when they…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computation, Developmental Stages, Inferences
Peer reviewedNelson, Deborah G. Kemler – Cognitive Development, 1995
Three studies investigated the influence of principle-based inferences and unprincipled similarity relations on new category learning by three- to six-year-old children. Results indicated that categorization into newly learned categories may activate self-initiated, principle-based reasoning in young children, suggesting that spontaneous…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedWatson, Jane M. – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2001
Follows an earlier study of school students' abilities to draw inferences when comparing two data sets presented in graphical form. Results for individual student development add to the credibility of the cross-age observations as well as support the hierarchical framework suggested by the original study. Documents changes in levels of performance…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Inferences, Mathematics Instruction
Zimmer, Hubert D. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
Participants acquired spatial knowledge of a fictitious island by studying either (a) a complete physical map, (b) a sequence of part maps each showing the outline of the island and a subset of the landmarks, or (c) a sequence of sentences each describing a part map. During test, they verified the direction between 2 landmarks. Spatial knowledge…
Descriptors: Maps, Sentences, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes
Falbo, Bianca – Composition Studies, 2004
This essay examines contradictory attitudes toward teaching and writing at a small college. Looking at her "private" experience as a teacher and "public" experience as a WPA, the author considers how assumptions about the privatization of teaching inhibit deep understanding of teaching and learning as intellectual work.
Descriptors: Small Colleges, College Faculty, Privatization, Teaching (Occupation)
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Intelligence, 1986
The goal of this unified theory of human reasoning is to specify what constitutes reasoning and to characterize the psychological distinction between inductive and deductive reasoning. The theory views reasoning as the controlled and mediated application of three processes (encoding, comparison and selective combination) to inferential rules. (JAZ)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Deduction, Encoding (Psychology)
Peer reviewedSwanson, H. Lee – Child Study Journal, 1985
Investigates, using eight scenarios, children making inferences about memory from incomplete knowledge and children varying in what they judge as relevant information in their schema. Showed that older children are less likely than younger ones to invoke an inferential schema when making memory judgements. (Author/BB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures
Peer reviewedMcIntosh, Margaret – Reading Teacher, 1985
Argues that making inferences is an integral part of reading comprehension. Presents classroom strategies based on current research that encourage inference skill development. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Inferences, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedAnderson, Richard C.; And Others – Cognition and Instruction, 1997
Examined children's naturally occurring arguments sampled from transcripts of discussions in fourth-grade classrooms. Found that children's arguments had vague referring expressions, sometimes did not contain explicit conclusions, and seemed to lack explicit warrants to authorize conclusions. Missing or oblique information was usually given in the…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Deduction, Inferences
Peer reviewedMcKoon, Gail; Ratcliff, Roger – Psychological Review, 1992
The minimalist hypothesis of inference processing is proposed. According to this hypothesis, the only inferences coded automatically during reading are those based on easily available information and those required to make statements in a text locally coherent. Five experiments with 249 college students support the hypothesis. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Comprehension, Encoding (Psychology)
Peer reviewedHegarty, Mary; Revlin, Russell – Discourse Processes, 1999
Suggests two models of how readers create bridging inferences to resolve signals to textual cohesion. Evaluates reading times, verification accuracy, verification latency, and regressive eye fixations to support the model which views bridges as the result of a form of deduction in which the reader tacitly establishes premises that provide rational…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Cassidy, Kimberly Wright; Cosetti, Maura; Jones, Ressa; Kelton, Emily; Rafal, Valerie Meier; Richman, Lisa; Stanhaus, Heather – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2005
This study examines the conditions under which 3-year-olds can use the desires of others to predict others' behavior. In Study 1, children were highly successful in predicting the actions of an agent based on that agent's desires when they were explicitly told about the agent's desires, even when the agent's desires were strongly different from…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Comprehension, Behavior, Conflict

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