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Klaczynski, Paul A. – Child Development, 2001
Examined the relationship between age and the normative/descriptive gap--the discrepancy between actual reasoning and traditional standards for reasoning. Found that middle adolescents performed closer to normative ideals than early adolescents. Factor analyses suggested that performance was based on two processing systems, analytic and heuristic…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cognitive Development, Decision Making, Performance Factors
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Hickling, Anne K.; Wellman, Henry M. – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Examined content of explanations from 4 children in everyday conversations recorded from 2.5 to 5 years of age. Found that explanations focused on varied entities and incorporated diverse modes. Pairings of entities with explanatory modes suggested appropriately constrained yet flexible causal reasoning, consistent with hypothesis that young…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Discourse Analysis, Longitudinal Studies, Preschool Children
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Ruffman, Ted; Rustin, Charlotte; Garnham, Wendy; Parkin, Alan J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Examined source monitoring and false memories in 6-, 8-, and 10-year-olds related to their memory of information presented by videotape and/or audiotape. Found that certainty rating revealed deficits in children's understanding of when they had erred on source questions and when they had made false alarms. Inhibitory ability accounted for unique…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Jones, Emily J. H.; Herbert, Jane S. – Infant and Child Development, 2006
Imitation is an important means by which infants learn new behaviours. When infants do not have the opportunity to immediately reproduce observed actions, they may form a memory representation of the event which can guide their behaviour when a similar situation is encountered again. Imitation procedures can, therefore, provide insight into infant…
Descriptors: Infants, Memory, Imitation, Cognitive Development
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Colombo, John; Kannass, Kathleen N.; Jill Shaddy, D.; Kundurthi, Shashi; Maikranz, Julie M.; Anderson, Christa J.; Blaga, Otilia M.; Carlson, Susan E. – Child Development, 2004
Infants were followed longitudinally to document the relationship between docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) levels and the development of attention. Erythrocyte (red-blood cell; RBC) phospholipid DHA (percentage of total fatty acids) was measured from infants and mothers at delivery. Infants were assessed in infant-control habituation at 4, 6, and 8…
Descriptors: Mothers, Cognitive Development, Infants, Habituation
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Carlson, Stephanie M.; Wong, Antoinette; Lemke, Margaret; Cosser, Caron – Child Development, 2005
Given that gestures may provide access to transitions in cognitive development, preschoolers' performance on standard tasks was compared with their performance on a new gesture false belief task. Experiment 1 confirmed that children (N45, M age54 months) responded consistently on two gesture tasks and that there is dramatic improvement on both the…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Preschool Children, Cognitive Development, Nonverbal Communication
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Markwell, John; Courtney, Sean – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2006
Students' reactions to classroom learning and the mastery of science vary along a wide spectrum of attitudes and emotions. In particular, we argue here that how learners encounter and learn subject matter is a function of their level of cognitive development. We describe the stages of cognitive development based on the work of William Perry and…
Descriptors: College Science, Biochemistry, Cognitive Development, Undergraduate Students
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Kahn, Peter H., Jr. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2004
The author suggests that theory of mind can help the moral developmental field uncover children's concepts of persons and psychological systems. Conversely, moral developmental theory can help theory of mind move toward nonreductionistic theorizing and research.
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Moral Values, Theories, Children
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Perone, Sammy; Oakes, Lisa M. – Child Development, 2006
Function has been considered important in numerous literatures in the study of cognitive development, yet little is known about what and how infants learn about function. Five experiments examined what 10-month-old infants (N=80) learn about functions that involve a sound produced when an object is acted on. Infants habituated to a single object…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Cognitive Development, Infants, Experimental Psychology
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Lyn, Heidi; Greenfield, Patricia; Savage-Rumbaugh, Sue – Cognitive Development, 2006
This research investigates the development of symbolic or representational play in two species of the genus "Pan", bonobos ("Pan paniscus") and chimpanzees ("Pan troglodytes"). The participants varied not only by species, but also as to whether they had become proficient in communicating with humans via a set of arbitrary visual symbols, called…
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Cognitive Development, Stimuli, Primatology
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Dowlati, Ramezan; Abravanel, Eugene – Cognitive Development, 2006
Utilization of a footprint trail for locating a hidden person may indicate the extension of semiotics to the spatial domain of search. We sought to determine whether young children implemented footprint tracking, and found that at 3-years they successfully tracked footprints on only 3% of trials, at 4-years on 9% of trials, and at 5-years on 41%…
Descriptors: Young Children, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development
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Berthier, Neil E.; Rosenstein, Michael T.; Barto, Andrew G. – Psychological Review, 2005
Current models of psychological development rely heavily on connectionist models that use supervised learning. These models adapt network weights when the network output does not match the target outputs computed by some agent. The authors present a model of motor learning in which the child uses exploration to discover appropriate ways of…
Descriptors: Psychology, Cognitive Development, Models, Simulation
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Ganea, Patricia A.; Lillard, Angeline S.; Turkheimer, Eric – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2004
This research investigated 3- to 5-year-old's understanding of the role of intentional states and action in pretense. There are two main perspectives on how children conceptualize pretense. One view is that children understand the mental aspects of pretending (the rich interpretation). The alternative view is that children conceptualize pretense…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Cognitive Development, Intention, Role
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Courage, Mary L.; Howe, Mark L. – Developmental Review, 2004
Over the past three decades impressive progress has been made in documenting the development of encoding, storage, and retrieval processes in preverbal infants and children. This literature includes an extensive and diverse database as well as theoretical conjecture about the underlying processes that drive early memory development. A selective…
Descriptors: Memory, Infants, Children, Cognitive Development
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Perner, Josef; Sprung, Manuel; Steinkogler, Bettina – Cognitive Development, 2004
The objective of this study was to explore factors that affect the difficulty of counterfactual reasoning in 3-5-year-old children and to shed light on the reason why counterfactual reasoning relates to understanding false belief [Cognitive Development, 13 (1998) 73-90]. Using travel scenarios, the difference between simple scenarios, in which…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Thinking Skills, Beliefs, Preschool Children
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