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Tudge, Jonathan R. H.; Winterhoff, Paul A. – Human Development, 1993
Because developmental theories of Vygotsky, Piaget, and Bandura are far more complex than much of the empirical work based on them, researchers have concentrated on relatively narrow aspects of each man's ideas, in the process magnifying the differences between them. Nevertheless, basic differences do exist in each theorist's conceptualization of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Epistemology, Individual Differences, Models
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Zimmerman, Barry J. – Human Development, 1993
Agrees with proposition of Tudge and Winterhoff in the previous article that the differences between the developmental theories of Vygotsky, Piaget, and Bandura have been exaggerated over the last 30 years. Perceived differences that distinguished these theories in the early 1960s have diminished dramatically, due in part to the later work of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Epistemology, Individual Differences, Models
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Lewis, Marc D. – Human Development, 1995
Presents a model of cognition and emotion that suggests that feedback between cognition and emotion generates, maintains, and reconfigures interpretations of emotion-eliciting events at micro- and macrodevelopmental time scales and that personality and behavior self-organize in response to fluctuations in perception or cognition and trace…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Feedback, Individual Differences, Models
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Salkind, Neil J.; Wright, John C. – Human Development, 1977
Presents an alternative conceptual model of Reflection-Impulsivity. The alternative dimension delineates both a cognitive style and a cognitive efficiency dimension. A methodological alternative for use with the model is also presented. (BD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Conceptual Schemes, Conceptual Tempo, Efficiency