Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 1 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 2 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 2 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 8 |
Descriptor
Child Development | 8 |
Infants | 8 |
Primatology | 8 |
Cognitive Processes | 4 |
Age Differences | 2 |
Animals | 2 |
Brain | 2 |
Eye Movements | 2 |
Foreign Countries | 2 |
Human Body | 2 |
Object Permanence | 2 |
More ▼ |
Source
Developmental Science | 2 |
Child Development | 1 |
Cognition | 1 |
Cognitive Development | 1 |
Cognitive Science | 1 |
Developmental Psychology | 1 |
International Journal of… | 1 |
Author
Balas, Benjamin | 1 |
Barnes, Jennifer L. | 1 |
Blanco, Marissa | 1 |
Call, Josep | 1 |
Fair, Joseph | 1 |
Federica Amici | 1 |
Flom, Ross | 1 |
Hodent, Celia | 1 |
Houde, Olivier | 1 |
Jones, Jacob | 1 |
Katja Liebal | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 8 |
Reports - Research | 7 |
Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
Education Level
Elementary Education | 1 |
Audience
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Katja Liebal; Manuela Ersson-Lembeck; Federica Amici; Martin Schultze; Manfred Holodynski – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2024
The component model of human parenting has been extensively used to study parents' interactions with their offspring and to examine variation across cultural contexts. The current study applies this model to nonhuman primates to investigate which forms of parenting humans share with other primates and how these interactions change over infants'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parent Child Relationship, Parenting Skills, Child Rearing
Woodruff Carr, Kali; Perszyk, Danielle R.; Norton, Elizabeth S.; Voss, Joel L.; Poeppel, David; Waxman, Sandra R. – Developmental Science, 2021
The power and precision with which humans link language to cognition is unique to our species. By 3-4 months of age, infants have already established this link: simply listening to human language facilitates infants' success in fundamental cognitive processes. Initially, this link to cognition is also engaged by a broader set of acoustic stimuli,…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Development, Brain, Language Processing
Fair, Joseph; Flom, Ross; Jones, Jacob; Martin, Justin – Child Development, 2012
Six-month-olds reliably discriminate different monkey and human faces whereas 9-month-olds only discriminate different human faces. It is often falsely assumed that perceptual narrowing reflects a permanent change in perceptual abilities. In 3 experiments, ninety-six 12-month-olds' discrimination of unfamiliar monkey faces was examined. Following…
Descriptors: Primatology, Infants, Human Body, Experiments
Balas, Benjamin; Moulson, Margaret C. – Developmental Psychology, 2011
Adults preferentially use information from the left side of face images to judge gender, emotion, and identity. In this study, we examined the development of this visual-field bias over middle childhood (5-10 years). Our goal was to both characterize the developmental trajectory of the left-side bias (should one exist) and examine the selectivity…
Descriptors: Infants, Children, Primatology, Perception
Mandler, Jean M. – Cognitive Science, 2012
A theory of how concept formation begins is presented that accounts for conceptual activity in the first year of life, shows how increasing conceptual complexity comes about, and predicts the order in which new types of information accrue to the conceptual system. In a compromise between nativist and empiricist views, it offers a single…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Theories, Cognitive Processes, Attention
Mahajan, Neha; Barnes, Jennifer L.; Blanco, Marissa; Santos, Laurie R. – Developmental Science, 2009
Both human infants and adult non-human primates share the capacity to track small numbers of objects across time and occlusion. The question now facing developmental and comparative psychologists is whether similar mechanisms give rise to this capacity across the two populations. Here, we explore whether non-human primates' object tracking…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Infants, Primatology, Object Permanence
Mendes, Natacha; Rakoczy, Hannes; Call, Josep – Cognition, 2008
Developmental research suggests that whereas very young infants individuate objects purely on spatiotemporal grounds, from (at latest) around 1 year of age children are capable of individuating objects according to the kind they belong to and the properties they instantiate. As the latter ability has been found to correlate with language, some…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Infants, Primatology, Developmental Stages
Language-Specific Effects on Number Computation in Toddlers: A European Cross-Linguistic Cartography
Lubin, Amelie; Pineau, Arlette; Hodent, Celia; Houde, Olivier – Cognitive Development, 2006
A fundamental question in developmental science is how brains with and without language compute numbers. Measuring young children's verbal reactions in Spain and Finland, we show that, although there is a general arithmetic ability for small numbers that is shared by monkeys and preverbal infants, the development of such initial knowledge in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cartography, Numbers, Computation