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Metcalf, Jennifer L.; Atance, Cristina M. – Cognitive Development, 2011
Using a new paradigm for measuring children's saving behaviors involving two marble games differing in desirability, we assessed whether 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds saved marbles for future use, saved increasingly on a second trial, saved increasingly with age, and were sensitive to the relative value of future rewards. We also assessed whether…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Models, Rewards, Cognitive Development
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Shtulman, Andrew – Cognitive Development, 2009
The ability to differentiate possible events from impossible ones is an invaluable skill when reasoning about claims that transcend the perceptual evidence at hand, yet preschool-aged children do not readily make this differentiation when reasoning about physically extraordinary events [Shtulman, A., & Carey, S. (2007). "Improbable or impossible?…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Development, Preschool Children, Cognitive Development
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Bosco, Francesca M.; Friedman, Ori; Leslie, Alan M. – Cognitive Development, 2006
We compared 1- and 2-year-old children's performance on Pretend and Reality tasks. Pretend tasks involved the comprehension of a pretend scenario, whereas Reality tasks did not. For example, the experimenter pretends to drink water from an empty cup, she fills another cup with imaginary water and then invites the child to drink. In the Reality…
Descriptors: Infants, Toddlers, Task Analysis, Play
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Scholnick, Ellin Kofsky; Wing, Clara S. – Cognitive Development, 1995
Compared the use of conditional logic in adult-adult and adult-child conversation. Results indicated that conversation patterns and inferences were similar except that children made fewer independent inferences and shifts in taxonomic level and responded more frequently to socially controlling statements than did adults. (AA)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adults, Age Differences, Child Development