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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Rachna B. Reddy; Henry M. Wellman – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
In many cultural contexts, judging another as conscious or not has profound practical, legal, and philosophical consequences. However, little research focuses on how our ability to make such judgements arises. Thirty years ago a classic set of studies by Flavell et al. demonstrated that children do not develop a complex understanding of conscious…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning, Metacognition, Concept Formation
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Callaghan, Tara – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2020
Two themes emerge from studies of the development of symbolic understanding; that development proceeds through multiple levels of understanding prior to full and reflective knowledge of the representational function of pictorial symbols, and that development is founded upon individual cognitive and social cognitive proclivities as well as on…
Descriptors: Pictorial Stimuli, Cognitive Development, Social Cognition, Concept Formation
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Miosga, Nadja; Schultze, Thomas; Schulz-Hardt, Stefan; Rakoczy, Hannes – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2020
Recent research has shown that from early in development, children selectively form new beliefs in response to information supplied by others. However, little is known about the development of selective revision of existing beliefs in response to socially conveyed information. Such selective social belief revision has been extensively studied by…
Descriptors: Young Children, Social Cognition, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation
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Chalik, Lisa; Rhodes, Marjorie – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2014
Developing mechanisms for predicting human action is a critical task of early conceptual development. Three studies examined whether 4-year-old children (N = 149) use social allegiances to predict behavior, by testing whether they expect the experiences of social partners to influence individual action. After being exposed to a conflict between…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Prediction, Friendship, Conflict
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Taylor, Sophie Jane; Barker, Lynne Ann; Heavey, Lisa; McHale, Sue – Developmental Psychology, 2013
Executive functions and social cognition develop through childhood into adolescence and early adulthood and are important for adaptive goal-oriented behavior (Apperly, Samson, & Humphreys, 2009; Blakemore & Choudhury, 2006). These functions are attributed to frontal networks known to undergo protracted maturation into early adulthood…
Descriptors: Child Development, Adolescent Development, Cognitive Development, Executive Function
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Tunmer, William E. – Child Development, 1985
Acquisition of sentient-nonsentient distinction in 48 children between four- and seven-years-of-age occurred later than animate-inanimate distinction. The children's use of naturalistic or nonnaturalistic explanations depended on the logical nature of events in which objects were involved rather than familiarity with objects themselves. Ability to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Concept Formation, Foreign Countries
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Jordan, Valerie Barnes – Child Development, 1980
Piaget's conservation paradigm was used to assess five- to seven-year-old children's understanding of the permanence of various kinship roles. Children's conservation was studied by applying certain transformations on single- and multiple-kinship role combinations. Kinship conservation developed gradually in this age range. Females' performance…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept), Sex Differences
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Leahy, Robert L. – Child Development, 1981
Children and adolescents from four social classes were asked to describe rich and poor people and to indicate how the rich and the poor are different from and similar to each other. Responses were classified into three categories of person description: peripheral (possessions, appearances, and behavior), central (traits and thoughts), and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
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Smetana, Judith G. – Child Development, 1986
Examines the conceptual basis of preschoolers' judgments regarding cross-gender behavior, taking into consideration the type of sex-role regularity and whether it is male or female sex-role stereotype. (HOD)
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Evaluative Thinking
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Tisak, Marie S.; Ford, Martin E. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1986
Explores children's understanding of a variety of interpersonal events, focusing mainly on the question of whether, and in what way, their conceptions of these events were heterogeneous or undifferentiated. (HOD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Burleson, Brant R. – Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1981
Presents the major assumptions of cognitive-developmental theory on social reasoning processes. Provides a selective review of research on social reasoning in various domains and discusses implications of the cognitive-developmental analysis of social reasoning for argumentation theory. (JMF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Developmental Stages, Higher Education
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Furth, Hans G. – Human Development, 1996
Claims that mind and mental objects form a societal mental structure enabling children to assimilate the society and become co-constructing members. Cites evidence that competence to create mental objects, symbols, and meanings separated from action is the evolutionary evolved human capacity for society and culture. Vygotsky's "natural"…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Constructivism (Learning)
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Gauducheau, Nadia; Cuisinier, Frederique – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2005
The present study investigates the development of children's ability to make inferences about a peer's mental state. In this study 48 eight-year-old children, 49 ten-year-old children and 44 adults observed and analyzed short video sequences, extracts from a socio-cognitive interaction between two children working on a mathematical task. The…
Descriptors: Inferences, Cognitive Development, Children, Foreign Countries
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Tomasello, Michael – Human Development, 1996
Recent research has established closer links between language, cognition, and social life than Piaget or Vygotsky imagined. Connections have been established between object permanence development and acquisition of disappearance words and the quantity and quality of child-adult joint attentional social interactions and children's early word…
Descriptors: Adult Child Relationship, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Individual Development
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Brockmeier, Jens – Human Development, 1996
Examines two prominent positions in the epistemological foundations of psychology--Piaget's causal explanatory claims and Vygotsky's interpretive understanding; contends that they need to be placed in their wider philosophical contexts. Argues that the danger of causally explaining cultural practices through which human beings construct and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology, Comprehension, Concept Formation
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