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Montirosso, Rosario; Peverelli, Milena; Frigerio, Elisa; Crespi, Monica; Borgatti, Renato – Social Development, 2010
The primary purpose of this study was to examine the effect of the intensity of emotion expression on children's developing ability to label emotion during a dynamic presentation of five facial expressions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, and sadness). A computerized task (AFFECT--animated full facial expression comprehension test) was used to…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Psychological Patterns, Recognition (Psychology), Young Children
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Moreno, Amanda J.; Klute, Mary M.; Robinson, JoAnn L. – Social Development, 2008
The goal of this study was to examine children's cognitive and language development and social engagement of mother as mediators of the relationship between maternal emotional availability at 15 months and children's empathy at the ages of two and four. Participants were 661 low-income, ethnically diverse mother-child dyads participating in a…
Descriptors: Mothers, Home Visits, Parent Child Relationship, Empathy
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Coull, Greig J.; Leekam, Susan R.; Bennett, Mark – Social Development, 2006
This study investigated how 4- to 7-year-old children's second-order belief attribution might be facilitated by either reducing information processing or varying the sequence of task questions. In Experiment 1, compared with Perner and Wimmer's (1985) original second-order false-belief task, a new task with reduced information-processing demands…
Descriptors: Information Processing, Cognitive Development, Experiments, Young Children
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Charman, Tony; Ruffman, Ted; Clements, Wendy – Social Development, 2002
Studied gender effects on false belief development among children ages 2 to 6 years. Found a slight advantage for girls on false belief task performance in both datasets that was apparent in younger but not older children. Language ability could be controlled only in a small subsample and cannot be ruled out as a mediator to this effect. (JPB)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Data Analysis, Sex Differences
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Coull, Greig J.; Leekam, Susan R.; Bennett, Mark – Social Development, 2006
This study investigated how 4- to 7-year-old children's second-order belief attribution might be facilitated by either reducing information processing or varying the sequence of task questions. In Experiment 1, compared with Perner and Wimmer's (1985) original second-order false-belief task, a new task with reduced information-processing demands…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Attribution Theory, Beliefs
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Cahill, Katherine R.; Deater-Deckard, Kirby; Pike, Alison; Hughes, Claire – Social Development, 2007
We tested the hypothesis that mother-child warmth and responsiveness would moderate the link between young children's theory of mind skills and self-worth. Participants included 125 same-sex pairs of 3.5 year-old twins and their mothers. A battery of tests was individually administered to measure the children's theory of mind skills and verbal…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Mothers, Child Behavior, Parent Child Relationship
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Linnell, Maggie; Fluck, Michael – Social Development, 2001
Examined effect of maternal support on the development of counting and cardinality in young children at 32, 38, and 44 months of age. At the two earlier times, children were more successful at counting than determining cardinal relationships in both supported and unsupported contexts. Findings suggest that both social and cognitive biases contain…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Computation, Interaction, Mathematical Aptitude
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Smiley, Patricia A. – Social Development, 2001
Explored the relation between types of peer behavior in young children to children's level of intention understanding. Found level of intention understanding predicted types of overtures made, types of objects offered, monitoring of partner responses, partner compliance, and types of speech acts addressed to partners. (Author/DLH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Context Effect, Inquiry