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| Child Development | 14 |
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| Ward, Thomas B. | 3 |
| Baldwin, Dare A. | 1 |
| Bertrand, Jacquelyn | 1 |
| Callanan, Maureen A. | 1 |
| Caruso, John L. | 1 |
| Cook, Greg | 1 |
| Gordon, Peter | 1 |
| Hayne, Harlene | 1 |
| Kobasigawa, Akira | 1 |
| Krackow, Elisa | 1 |
| Lucariello, Joan | 1 |
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| Journal Articles | 12 |
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Peer reviewedBaldwin, Dare A. – Child Development, 1989
Expectations concerning form and color in object label referencing of 80 children of 2-3 years were examined in 2 studies. Findings show that children as young as 2 expect form similarity to be a better guide than color similarity to the extension of object labels. (RJC)
Descriptors: Classification, Color, Developmental Stages, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedWard, Thomas B. – Child Development, 1990
Addresses Nelson's commentary on Ward, Vela, and Hass' study of children's category learning (both of which are in this issue). Discusses the issue of whether a holistic processing view provides a better account of children's learning than does an analytical view. (PCB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Classification, Concept Formation, Holistic Approach
Peer reviewedWard, Thomas B.; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Three experiments examined the modes of processing that children and adults use in learning family-resemblance categories. Children and adults exhibited primarily analytic, rather than holistic, modes of learning. (PCB)
Descriptors: Adults, Child Development, Classification, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedNelson, Deborah G. Kemler – Child Development, 1990
Comments on this issue's article by Ward, Vela, and Hass on children's category learning. Suggests that aspects of the authors' methodology may have led them to underestimate holistic processing. (PCB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Classification, Concept Formation, Holistic Approach
Peer reviewedHayne, Harlene; And Others – Child Development, 1987
Infants were tested in three studies of the acquisition and long-term retention of category-specific information. Results document retention of category-specific information after intervals of two weeks. (PCB)
Descriptors: Classification, Infants, Learning Processes, Long Term Memory
Peer reviewedLucariello, Joan – Child Development, 1998
Describes the slot-filler model of taxonomic knowledge development in which preschoolers derive "slot-filler" categories from event schemas. Maintains that the model has received considerable support across methodologies, ages, and sociocultural contexts. Argues that Krackow and Gordon's theorizing and methods could not lead to reliable,…
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cultural Influences
Peer reviewedCallanan, Maureen A. – Child Development, 1985
Reports the results of one study in which parents taught their two- to four-year-olds basic and superordinate concepts, and another, in which they taught them subordinate concepts. Parents' teaching styles were analyzed in terms of their usefulness for children who are attempting to learn about principles of hierarchical classification. (AS)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Language
Peer reviewedKobasigawa, Akira; Middleton, Donald B. – Child Development, 1972
Study concerned with the question of why older children remember more in categorized free recall. (Authors/MB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cluster Grouping, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedCaruso, John L.; Resnick, Lauren B. – Child Development, 1972
The present study is based on a form of task analysis that explicates in detail the hypothesized solution behavior of skilled performers of the task. (Authors)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Data Analysis, Kindergarten Children
Peer reviewedThompson, Laura A. – Child Development, 1994
Examined the nature of perceptual classification in children and young adults. Found that most children attend selectively to one stimulus dimension when making perceptual classification judgments. Suggests that this developmental trend does not appear to be a holistic-to-analytic shift but rather a trend toward greater consistency in following a…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Child Development, Children, Classification
Peer reviewedCook, Greg; Stephens, J. Todd – Child Development, 1995
Two experiments investigated perceptual primacy of dimensional and similarity relations in stimulus classification of mentally retarded children. Results support a distinction between separable and integral stimulus structures, but do not support an integral-to-separable shift in perceptual development. Results suggest implications for…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Children, Classification, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedMervis, Carolyn B.; Bertrand, Jacquelyn – Child Development, 1994
Examined the use by children of the Novel Name-Nameless Category principle, under the framework that lexical principles are acquired in a developmental sequence. Results indicated that the particular principle was not available at the start of lexical acquisition but that exhaustive categorization ability and a vocabulary spurt occur…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Classification, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedKrackow, Elisa; Gordon, Peter – Child Development, 1998
Examined whether superior recall of items in event-based categorical relations, or "slot fillers," remained when association and typicality were controlled. Found that only children receiving the typical + high association slot-filler list showed significantly better recall than with the taxonomic-coordinate list, with no differences…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Associative Learning, Classification, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedWard, Thomas B.; And Others – Child Development, 1989
Studied the way in which 32 preschoolers aged three-five years, 28 second-graders and 64 undergraduates generalized from a labeled exemplar to other potential members of the same category. Results indicated that preschoolers focused mostly on single attributes in making category decisions and older individuals primarily exhibited multiple…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Development, Decision Making


