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Klemfuss, J. Zoe; Ceci, Stephen J. – Developmental Review, 2012
Young children are often called as witnesses to crimes they were victims of or observed. Because of their immaturity, child witnesses are sometimes more heavily scrutinized than adult witnesses before being allowed to testify in court, for example, through competency screening. This review discusses the psychology and US law relevant to decisions…
Descriptors: Children, Competence, Court Litigation, Laws
Barrouillet, Pierre – Developmental Review, 2011
Dual-process theories have gained increasing importance in psychology. The contrast that they describe between an old intuitive and a new deliberative mind seems to make these theories especially suited to account for development. Accordingly, this special issue aims at presenting the latest applications of dual-process theories to cognitive…
Descriptors: Evidence, Psychologists, Developmental Psychology, Cognitive Development
Valentino, Kristin – Developmental Review, 2011
Overgeneral memory (OGM) is a phenomenon that refers to difficulty retrieving specific autobiographical memories. The tendency to be overgeneral in autobiographical memory recall has been commonly observed among individuals with emotional disorders compared to those without emotional disorders. Despite significant advances in identifying…
Descriptors: Psychopathology, Developmental Psychology, Autobiographies, Memory
Peterson, Carole – Developmental Review, 2012
This is a review of two bodies of research conducted by myself and my colleagues that is relevant to child witness issues, namely childhood amnesia and children's eyewitness memory for stressful events. Although considerable research over the years has investigated the phenomenon of childhood amnesia in adults, only recently has it begun to be…
Descriptors: Children, Early Adolescents, Court Litigation, Memory
Best, John R. – Developmental Review, 2010
Executive function refers to the cognitive processes necessary for goal-directed cognition and behavior, which develop across childhood and adolescence. Recent experimental research indicates that both acute and chronic aerobic exercise promote children's executive function. Furthermore, there is tentative evidence that not all forms of aerobic…
Descriptors: Exercise, Children, Developmental Psychology, Cognitive Processes
Pellegrini, Anthony D. – Developmental Review, 2008
Extant literature in developmental psychology has documented the co-occurrence of aggressive and affiliative behaviors with various measures of social dominance. While these findings have been taken as evidence for the functional value of aggression, they have not been integrated into a more general theoretical frame accounting for contextual…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Interpersonal Competence, Peer Relationship, Aggression
Harshaw, Christopher – Developmental Review, 2008
Hunger, thirst and satiety have an enormous influence on cognition, behavior and development, yet we often take for granted that they are simply inborn or innate. Converging data and theory from both comparative and human domains, however, supports the conclusion that the phenomena hunger, thirst and satiety are not innate but rather emerge…
Descriptors: Systems Approach, Hunger, Developmental Psychology, Emotional Development
Greve, Werner; Bjorklund, David F. – Developmental Review, 2009
We extend an evolutionary perspective of development to the lifespan, proposing that human longevity may be related to the experience, knowledge, and wisdom provided by older members of human groups. In addition to the assistance in childcare provided by grandmothers to their daughters, the experience of wise elders could have served to benefit…
Descriptors: Evolution, Daughters, Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages
Jensen, Lene Arnett – Developmental Review, 2008
This paper proposes a cultural-developmental approach to moral psychology. The approach builds on and synthesizes findings from different research traditions, including the cognitive-developmental, domain, two orientations, three ethics, and moral identity traditions. The paper introduces a conception termed a "cultural-developmental template."…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Psychology, Ethics, Moral Development
Pennington, Bruce F.; Snyder, Kelly A.; Roberts, Ralph J., Jr. – Developmental Review, 2007
This commentary explains how the field of developmental cognitive neuroscience (DCN) holds the promise of a much wider interdisciplinary integration across sciences concerned with development: psychology, molecular genetics, neurobiology, and evolutionary developmental biology. First we present a brief history of DCN, including the key theoretical…
Descriptors: Genetics, Developmental Psychology, Molecular Biology, Interdisciplinary Approach
Brainerd, C. J. – Developmental Review, 2006
"Developmental Review" is a journal of literature reviews and theoretical analyses for developmental scientists. During its first quarter-century of publication, the quality of those articles resulted in a journal whose level of impact on the scientific literature is extremely high, currently in the top 10% of all journals indexed by "Social…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Developmental Psychology, Journal Articles

Bickhard, Mark H. – Developmental Review, 1999
States that Demetriou and Raftopoulos's theory of cognitive developmental change based on the nature of representation is flawed. Argues against theme of representation as encoding as well as an alternative model of representation as interactivism. Concludes that other issues such as architectural support, variation and selective retention,…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Models

Zeedyk, M. Suzanne – Developmental Review, 1996
Evaluates dominant theoretical positions on the development of intentionality, including goal-directedness, the role of parental scaffolding, an innate capacity for intersubjectivity, and behavioral object-directedness. Argues that this theoretical diversity is undermining the construction of a coherent developmental account, and explores the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Intention, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)

Zelazo, Philip David; Lourenco, Stella Felix – Developmental Review, 2003
Describes a theory of the understanding and use of representations, drawing heavily on Paul Ricoeur's and James Mark Baldwin's theories. Presents this theory as construing representation as intrinsically mimetic, characterizing the development of representational understanding as internalization, and emphasizing the importance of self-reflection…
Descriptors: Children, Developmental Psychology, Individual Development, Models

Demetriou, Andreas; Raftopoulos, Athanassios; Kargopoulos, Phillip V. – Developmental Review, 1999
Rejoins that core elements of the mind emerge out of interactions between individual and environment. States that different approaches can be used to model different levels or phases in the organization and development of the mind. Focuses on issues of interactivism, connectionism, computationalism, and experientialism as complementary tools for…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Models