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Cohen, Michael – Cognitive Development, 1996
Investigated strategies used by preschoolers to accomplish a repeatedly requested practical task. Participants satisfied customer requests for vegetables in a play store, with the number of moves and strategy type recorded and coded. Arithmetic pre- and posttests were also administered. Found that with repeated exposure, the children became…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Performance Factors, Preschool Children, Problem Solving

Canobi, Katherine H.; Reeve, Robert A.; Pattison, Philippa E. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Examined the relationship between 6- to 8-year olds' conceptual understanding of additive composition, commutativity, and associativity principles and addition problem-solving procedures. Results revealed that conceptual understanding was related to using order-indifferent, decomposition, and retrieval strategies and speed and accuracy in solving…
Descriptors: Addition, Children, Cognitive Development, Mathematical Concepts

Bauer, Patricia J.; Schwade, Jennifer A.; Wewerka, Sandi Saeger; Delaney, Kathleen – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Three experiments tested 21- and 27-month olds' ability to construct a path to a mentally re-presented goal. After seeing the goal-state configuration of problems, both age groups evinced planning. Demonstration of initial solution step was less effective than goal-state exposure. Even with specification of a greater proportion of the goal path,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cues, Goal Orientation, Performance Factors

Klahr, David – Child Development, 1985
Move sequence analysis revealed that, when presented with problems having subgoals difficult to order, 40 preschoolers between 45 and 70 months of age (1) tended to avoid backup; (2) were sensitive to incremental progress toward a goal; and (3) searched moves ahead for a goal. None of several indices of performance were reliably correlated with…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Cognitive Development, Models, Performance Factors

Aguiar, Adrea; Baillargeon, Renee – Cognition, 2003
Five experiments demonstrated that 6.5-month-olds perseverated in a violation-of-expectation task to examine reasoning about width information in containment events. After watching a familiarization event in which a ball was lowered into a wide container, infants failed to detect the violation when the same ball was lowered into a container half…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Error Patterns, Expectation, Infant Behavior

Majeres, Raymond L.; O'Toole, Jean – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1980
Class inclusion problems differing in size of the array and in superordinate class were given to 84 boys and girls in grades 1 through 4 in a first experiment, and 41 boys and girls in grades 3 and 4 in a second experiment. The experiments sought to determine performance variables explaining the developmentally late appearance of class-inclusion…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Conservation (Concept), Elementary Education

Denney, Nancy Wadsworth; Palmer, Ann M. – Journal of Gerontology, 1981
Studied adults (ages 20-79) presented with two types of problem-solving tasks: a typical task used in problem-solving research, and a task composed of practical daily life problems. Results indicated that developmental function depends on the type of problem presented, while performance on abstract problems may decrease with age. (Author)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Adults, Age Differences, Aging (Individuals)

Defeyter, Margaret Anne; German, Tim P. – Cognition, 2003
Two experiments yield data suggesting that the structure of children's concept of artifact function changes profoundly between age 5 and 7, with striking effects on problem-solving performance. This effect is not caused by differences in children's knowledge about the typical use of particular tools, but rather, is mediated by the structure of the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Design, Developmental Stages

Squire, Sarah; Bryant, Peter – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2002
Three studies investigated 5- to 8-year-olds' ability to solve partitive division problems when presented with a concrete model of a problem. Children found it easier to solve problems in Grouping-by-Divisor condition than in Grouping-by-Quotient condition, although there was evidence of developmental improvement in tasks. Findings suggest that…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Division

Thornton, Stephanie – Child Development, 1999
Proposes that conceptual change is constrained by the child's conceptual structures and the structures inherent in problem-solving tasks. Uses a microgenetic case study and group data to examine how interaction between strategies children bring to a task and the detailed task structure redirect children's attention and create the possibility of…
Descriptors: Attention, Case Studies, Children, Cognitive Development

Overton, Willis F.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1987
Three experiments explored the development of formal logical reasoning between Grades 4 and 12 and the role of semantic content in the solution of Wason's (1966) selection task problems. Results suggest that formal logical reasoning is not generally present during the fourth or sixth grades and that formal logical competence becomes available in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Deduction, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education
Odom, Richard D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1972
Perceptual and cognitive development were investigated in two recall tasks with 48 Ss from each of the grades kindergarten, third, and sixth. (Author)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Cognitive Development, Perceptual Development, Performance Factors

Rohles, Frederick H., Jr. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1971
Attempts to determine the age at which the concept of middleness," or intermediately positioned object, emerges and is functional. (MB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Maternal Regulation of Children's Problem-solving Behavior and Its Impact on Children's Performance.

Freund, Lisa S. – Child Development, 1990
Focused on (1) the effect of mother-child interaction during a problem-solving task on subsequent, independent child performance; and (2) the variability in the division of task responsibilities and maternal regulation of the child as a function of task difficulty, child age, and task component. Participants were 60 three to five year olds and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Feedback, Individual Development, Mothers

Weismer, Susan Ellis – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1991
This study, which assessed hypothesis-testing abilities using a discrimination-learning paradigm, found that 16 language-impaired primary-level children solved fewer problems than 16 controls equated on cognitive level, but the 2 groups used similar hypothesis types to solve the problems. Type of verbal feedback (explicit versus nonexplicit) did…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Discrimination Learning, Feedback, Hypothesis Testing