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Cheung, Fanny M. – American Psychologist, 2012
Despite the "awakening" to the importance of culture in psychology in America, international psychology has remained on the sidelines of psychological science. The author recounts her personal and professional experience in tandem with the stages of development in international/cross-cultural psychology. Based on her research in cross-cultural…
Descriptors: Psychology, Cross Cultural Studies, Culturally Relevant Education, International Education
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Downey, Douglas B. – American Psychologist, 2001
Resource dilution model suggests that as the number of children increases, parental resources for each child decline. Assesses whether resource dilution could explain the effect of siblings on intellectual development tests. Identifies flaws in recent critiques of this position, discussing it as an explanation for why children with few siblings…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Family Influence, Family Size, Intellectual Development
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Rodgers, Joseph Lee – American Psychologist, 2001
Describes why birth order interests both parents and researchers, discussing what really causes apparent birth order effects on intelligence, examining problems with using cross-sectional intelligence data, and noting how to move beyond cross-sectional inferences. Explains the admixture hypothesis, which finds that family size is much more…
Descriptors: Birth Order, Cross Sectional Studies, Intellectual Development, Intelligence
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Michalski, Richard L.; Shackelford, Todd K. – American Psychologist, 2001
Critiques recent research on the effects of birth order on intelligence and personality, which found that the between-family design revealed that birth order negatively related to intelligence, while the within-family design revealed that birth order was unrelated to intelligence. Suggests that it may not be intelligence that co-varies with birth…
Descriptors: Birth Order, Family Environment, Intellectual Development, Intelligence Quotient
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Zajonc, R. B. – American Psychologist, 2001
Critiques Rodgers et al.'s June 2000 research on the relation between birth order and intelligence, which suggests that it is a methodological illusion. Explains how the intellectual environment and the teaching function (whereby older children tutor younger ones) contribute to the growth of intellectual maturity, the first negatively and the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Birth Order, Family Environment, Intellectual Development
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Zajonc, Robert B.; Mullally, Patricia R. – American Psychologist, 1997
Introduces the confluence model as a theory specifying the process by which the intellectual environment modifies intellectual development. Using this model, explores the contradiction between prediction of secular trends in test scores by trends in aggregate birth order and the lack of prediction of individual test scores by birth order using…
Descriptors: Birth Order, Intellectual Development, Intelligence Tests, Models
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Estes, W. K. – American Psychologist, 1974
Characterizes intelligence in terms of learning processes and uses the concepts and methods of other disciplines to understand how the conditions responsible for the development of its constituent processes and the manner of their organization lead to variations in effectiveness of intellectual functioning. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Diagnosis, Intellectual Development, Intelligence
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Zajonc, R. B. – American Psychologist, 1986
The confluence model shows the influence of family on intellectual growth. The decline of SAT scores is related to changing family patterns. Intellectual growth is lower for children with many siblings. The increase in average family size for the cohorts taking SATs between 1963 and 1980 caused scores to decline. (Author/VM)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Family Influence, Family Size, Intellectual Development
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Flavell, John H. – American Psychologist, 1986
Summarizes recent research which attempted to discover what children of different ages know about the appearance-reality distinction and related phenomena. Findings show that what helps children grasp the distinction is an increased cognizance of the fact that people are sentient subjects who have mental representations of objects and events. (PS)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Developmental Psychology
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Gagne, Robert M. – American Psychologist, 1984
Effects on learning of most principal independent variables can be generalized within, but not between, five different categories: intellectual skills, verbal information, cognitive strategies, motor skills, and attitudes. Psychological research has been and continues to be well-served by this categorization. (GC)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, Developmental Psychology
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Baltes, Paul B.; Schaie, K. Warner – American Psychologist, 1976
This reply to Horn and Donaldson is previous critique of Schaie and Baltes' Research and writings on intelligence in adulthood and old age has two parts: the first discusses theoretical perspectives and the second makes observations on the empirical data base. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Age Groups, Developmental Psychology, Formal Criticism
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Jarvik, Ussy F. – American Psychologist, 1975
Reflections on psychological perspectives of aging are focused around issues of biological changes and mental functioning, genetic factors in aging, psychological changes with aging, individual differences in mental functioning and the intellectual decline of the aged. (EH)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Genetics
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Horn, John; Donaldson, Gary – American Psychologist, 1976
Suggests that a careful review of the logical and empirical bases for the myth argument indicates that there is little to justify it. The evidence suggests that if one lives long enough, decrements in at least some of the important abilities of intelligence is likely to occur. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Age Differences, Age Groups, Conceptual Schemes
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Bruner, Jerome S. – American Psychologist, 1972
Examines several issues relative to the role of immaturity in the instruction of man, and how the young are inducted into the species. (DM)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavioral Science Research, Concept Formation, Evolution
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Zajonc, R. B. – American Psychologist, 2001
Birth order effects on intellectual performance show both positive and negative results. Considers the intellectual aspects of siblings' changing environments, explaining that birth order and family size effects depend crucially on the age at which children are tested. Within-family data conceal patterns of aggregate effects that are revealed by…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Birth Order, Child Development, Family (Sociological Unit)
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