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Ruffman, Ted; Slade, Lance; Redman, Jessica – Cognition, 2005
Infants aged 3-5 months (mean of approximately 4 months) were given a novel anticipatory looking task to test object permanence understanding. They were trained to expect an experimenter to retrieve an object from behind a transparent screen upon hearing a cue (''Doors up, here comes the hand''). The experimenter then hid the object behind one of…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Infants, Object Permanence, Stimulation
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Cassidy, Kimberly Wright; Fineberg, Deborah Shaw; Brown, Kimberly; Perkins, Alexis – Child Development, 2005
The theory-of-mind abilities of twins, children with nontwin siblings, and only children were compared to investigate further the link between number and type of siblings and theory-of-mind abilities. Three- to 5-year-old children with nontwin siblings outperformed both only children and twins with no other siblings, twins who also had other…
Descriptors: Twins, Cognitive Development, Siblings, Comparative Analysis
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Bedford, Felice L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
It has become increasingly common for theories to rely on a constraint that 1 object cannot be in more than 1 place at the same time. Analysis suggests that a 1 object--1 place--1 time constraint as literally stated is false, that a modified constraint is biased toward the visual modality, that it may not be a correct description of the physical…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Visual Perception, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes
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Flavell, John H. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This review begins with a brief history from Piagetian perspective-taking development, through metacognitive development, and into the past and present field of theory-of-mind development. This field has included research on what infants and children know about a variety of mental states, on possible causes and consequences of mentalistic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Child Development, Individual Differences, Theories
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van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H.; Juffer, Femmie; Poelhuis, Caroline W. Klein – Psychological Bulletin, 2005
This meta-analysis of 62 studies (N=17,767 adopted children) examined whether the cognitive development of adopted children differed from that of (a) children who remained in institutional care or in the birth family and (b) their current (environmental) nonadopted siblings or peers. Adopted children scored higher on IQ tests than their nonadopted…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Siblings, Intelligence Quotient, Cognitive Development
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Sharon, Tanya; Woolley, Jacqueline D. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Young children are often thought to confuse fantasy and reality. This study took a second look at preschoolers' fantasy/reality differentiation. We employed a new measure of fantasy/reality differentiation--a property attribution task--in which children were questioned regarding the properties of both real and fantastical entities. We also…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Fantasy, Attribution Theory, Task Analysis
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Munakata, Yuko – Developmental Review, 2004
Numerous brain areas work in concert to subserve memory, with distinct memory functions relying differentially on distinct brain areas. For example, semantic memory relies heavily on posterior cortical regions, episodic memory on hippocampal regions, and working memory on prefrontal cortical regions. This article reviews relevant findings from…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Memory, Neurology, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Learmonth, Amy E.; Lamberth, Rebecca; Rovee-Collier, Carolyn – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
Infants first generalize across contexts and cues at 3 months of age in operant tasks but not until 12 months of age in imitation tasks. Three experiments using an imitation task examined whether infants younger than 12 months of age might generalize imitation if conditions were more like those in operant studies. Infants sat on a distinctive mat…
Descriptors: Infants, Imitation, Cues, Context Effect
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Tappan, Mark B. – Journal of Moral Education, 2006
In this paper, I argue that it is quite useful, both theoretically and empirically, to adopt a socio-cultural approach to the study of moral development. This entails viewing "moral functioning" as a form of mediated action, and moral development as the process by which persons gradually appropriate a variety of "moral mediational means". Mediated…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Moral Values, Mediation Theory, Cultural Influences
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Smith, Linda B. – Developmental Review, 2005
Traditional approaches to cognitive development concentrate on the stability of cognition and explain that stability via concepts segregated from perceiving acting. A dynamic systems approach in contrast focuses on the self-organization of behavior in tasks. This article uses recent results concerning the embodiment of cognition to argue for a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Perception, Systems Approach, Behavior
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Andreou, Georgia; Karapetsas, Anargyros – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2004
The study investigated native language verbal skills among low and highly proficient bilinguals, using the WISC III verbal subtests. Highly proficient bilinguals showed a superiority for almost all verbal subtests. This finding lends support to Threshold Theory which maintains that bilinguals need to achieve high levels of linguistic proficiency…
Descriptors: Verbal Ability, Bilingualism, Cognitive Development, Language Proficiency
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Schwier, Christiane; van Maanen, Catharine; Carpenter, Malinda; Tomasello, Michael – Infancy, 2006
Gergely, Bekkering, and Kiraly (2002) demonstrated that 14-month-old infants engage in "rational imitation." To investigate the development and flexibility of this skill, we tested 12-month-olds on a different but analogous task. Infants watched as an adult made a toy animal use a particular action to get to an endpoint. In 1 condition there was a…
Descriptors: Imitation, Infants, Intention, Infant Behavior
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Sommerville, Jessica A.; Woodward, Amanda L. – Infancy, 2005
Current work has yielded differential findings regarding infants' ability to perceptually detect the causal structure of a means-end support sequence. Resolving this debate has important implications for perception-action dissociations in this domain of object knowledge. In Study 1, 12-month-old infants' ability to perceive the causal structure of…
Descriptors: Models, Infants, Perceptual Development, Habituation
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Wells-Jopling, Rebecca – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2006
Postmodern literary-critical thinking introduced into many disciplines in the 1950s and 1960s the quite peculiar, yet intellectually engaging, idea that what is written is always already-quoted. This idea is a logical derivation from the concurrent idea that writing is "prior to history"; thus, what was written and what is written were simply…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Literary Devices, Cognitive Development, Aesthetic Education
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2007
The foundations of brain architecture are established early in life through a continuous series of dynamic interactions in which environmental conditions and personal experiences have a significant impact on how genetic predispositions are expressed. Because specific experiences affect specific brain circuits during specific developmental…
Descriptors: Child Development, Neurological Organization, Cognitive Development, Experience
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