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Barrouillet, Pierre; Gavens, Nathalie; Vergauwe, Evie; Gaillard, Vinciane; Camos, Valerie – Developmental Psychology, 2009
The time-based resource-sharing model (P. Barrouillet, S. Bernardin, & V. Camos, 2004) assumes that during complex working memory span tasks, attention is frequently and surreptitiously switched from processing to reactivate decaying memory traces before their complete loss. Three experiments involving children from 5 to 14 years of age…
Descriptors: Late Adolescents, Short Term Memory, Children, Experiments
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Hala, Suzanne; Pexman, Penny M.; Glenwright, Melanie – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2007
Two explanations for deficits underlying autism were tested: weak central coherence (WCC) and executive dysfunction. Consistent with WCC, Happe ("British Journal of Developmental Psychology" 15 (1997) 1) found that children with autism failed to use sentence context in pronouncing homographs. In an alternate approach, we investigated whether…
Descriptors: Semantics, Developmental Psychology, Autism, Cognitive Development
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German, Tim P.; Truxaw, Danielle; Defeyter, Margaret Anne – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2007
Artifact knowledge requires integration of information from different areas of human commonsense knowledge--our everyday understanding of object mechanics and our everyday psychology. Here, we address the question of artifact conceptual structure, outlining evidence from tasks involving categorization, function judgments, and problem solving.
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Mass Media, Problem Solving, Children
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Menary, Richard – Language Sciences, 2007
In this paper I aim to show that the creation and manipulation of written vehicles is part of our cognitive processing and, therefore, that writing transforms our cognitive abilities. I do this from the perspective of cognitive integration: completing a complex cognitive, or mental, task is enabled by a co-ordinated interaction between neural…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Ability, Writing (Composition)
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Ross, Don – Language Sciences, 2007
This paper inquires into the extent to which humans are specially constituted relative to other animals by their language. First a principled concept of evolutionary specialness is operationalized. Then it is agreed that humans satisfy the criteria for this sort of specialness in consequence of the kind of cultural evolution in which they have…
Descriptors: Animals, Cognitive Development, Evolution, Language
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Schoner, Gregor; Dineva, Evelina – Developmental Science, 2007
That competences may emerge given appropriate environmental and behavioral context is a long-standing theme in developmental research. Work in the motor domain, but also in cognitive development, has made it possible to transform this idea into a mechanistic account closely linked to empirical evidence. In dynamic systems thinking, such capacities…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Learning Processes, Physical Activity Level, Motor Development
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Buttelmann, David; Carpenter, Malinda; Call, Josep; Tomasello, Michael – Developmental Science, 2007
Human infants imitate others' actions "rationally": they copy a demonstrator's action when that action is freely chosen, but less when it is forced by some constraint (Gergely, Bekkering & Kiraly, 2002). We investigated whether enculturated chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) also imitate rationally. Using Gergely and colleagues' (2002) basic procedure,…
Descriptors: Infants, Animals, Imitation, Acculturation
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McCormack, Teresa; Hoerl, Christoph – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2007
Four studies are reported that employed an object location task to assess temporal-causal reasoning. In Experiments 1-3, successfully locating the object required a retrospective consideration of the order in which two events had occurred. In Experiment 1, 5- but not 4-year-olds were successful; 4-year-olds also failed to perform at above-chance…
Descriptors: Young Children, Time Perspective, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Development
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Wolfe, Christy D.; Bell, Martha Ann – Brain and Cognition, 2007
This study was an attempt to integrate cognitive development (i.e., cognitive control) and emotional development (i.e., emotion regulation) in the first years of life. The construct of temperament was used to unify cognition and emotion because of its focus on attentional and regulatory behaviors. Children were seen at 8 months and 4 1/2-years of…
Descriptors: Personality, Young Children, Emotional Development, Cognitive Development
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McKinnon, Margaret C.; Moscovitch, Morris – Cognition, 2007
Using older adults and dual-task interference, we examined performance on two social reasoning tasks: theory of mind (ToM) tasks and versions of the deontic selection task involving social contracts and hazardous conditions. In line with performance accounts of social reasoning (Leslie, Friedman, & German, 2004), evidence from both aging and the…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Memory, Cognitive Development, Task Analysis
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Kuschner, David S. – Childhood Education, 1977
The author's understanding of Piagetian theory is compared to the "construction of reality" process hypothesized by Piaget. (JB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Educational Theories
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Lane, David M.; Pearson, Deborah A. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1983
Responds to three commentaries about a review paper by Lane and Pearson (Merrill-Palmer Quarterly; v28 n3 p317-37 Jul 1982). Commentaries were authored by John W. Hagen and Kim P. Wilson (v28 n4 p529-32 Oct 1982), Wendell E. Jeffrey (v28 n4 p523-28 Oct 1982), and Richard D. Odom (v28 n3 p339-45 Jul 1982). (RH)
Descriptors: Attention, Children, Cognitive Development
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Morss, J.R. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
The study described confirms previous research that has found delayed cognitive development of Down's Syndrome (DS) children. However, errors committed in task performance by DS infants did not conform to characteristic patterns for normal infants, indicating that cognitive development among DS children differs in important respects from that of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Ennis, Robert H. – Child Development, 1976
The proposed conceptualization of logical competence has 3 dimensions; principles, content, and complexity. (SB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Logical Thinking
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Beech, Nic; MacIntosh, Robert; MacLean, Donald; Shepherd, Jill; Stokes, John – Management Learning, 2002
Explores some of the constraints on knowledge development through a multi-perspective examination of a project in which there was an intention and enacted process to develop knowledge. Engaged with the generic question of what the conditions that facilitate knowledge creation in organizations are, considers data from three theoretical…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Knowledge Representation
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