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Vauclair, Jacques; Imbault, Juliette – Developmental Science, 2009
The aim of this study was to measure the pattern of hand preferences for pointing gestures as a function of object-manipulation handedness in 123 infants and toddlers (10-40 months). The results showed that not only right-handers but also left-handers and ambidextrous participants tended to use their right hand for pointing. There was a…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Nonverbal Communication, Handedness
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Pelucchi, Bruna; Hay, Jessica F.; Saffran, Jenny R. – Cognition, 2009
Numerous recent studies suggest that human learners, including both infants and adults, readily track sequential statistics computed between adjacent elements. One such statistic, transitional probability, is typically calculated as the likelihood that one element predicts another. However, little is known about whether listeners are sensitive to…
Descriptors: Infants, Test Items, Prediction, Probability
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Gliga, Teodora; Elsabbagh, Mayada; Andravizou, Athina; Johnson, Mark – Infancy, 2009
Infant's face preferences have previously been assessed in displays containing 1 or 2 faces. Here we present 6-month-old infants with a complex visual array containing faces among multiple visual objects. Despite the competing objects, infants direct their first saccade toward faces more frequently than expected by chance (Experiment 1). The…
Descriptors: Infants, Visual Perception, Nonverbal Communication, Visual Stimuli
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Spittle, Alicia J.; Treyvaud, Karli; Doyle, Lex W.; Roberts, Gehan; Lee, Katherine J.; Inder, Terrie E.; Cheong, Jeanie L. Y.; Hunt, Rod W.; Newnham, Carol A.; Anderson, Peter J. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2009
Parent assessment of infants who were born very preterm reveal that these children at two years of age demonstrate significantly higher internalizing and dysregulation scores than peers born at term.
Descriptors: Emotional Problems, Premature Infants, Toddlers, Scores
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Wood, Justin N.; Kouider, Sid; Carey, Susan – Developmental Psychology, 2009
A manual search paradigm explored the development of English singular-plural comprehension. After being shown a box into which they could reach but not see, infants heard verbal descriptions about the contents of the box (e.g., "There are some cars in the box" vs. "There is a car in the box)" and were then allowed to reach into the box. At 24…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Morphemes, Infants, Morphology (Languages)
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Kenward, Ben; Folke, Sara; Holmberg, Jacob; Johansson, Alexandra; Gredeback, Gustaf – Developmental Psychology, 2009
The term "goal directed" conventionally refers to either of 2 separate process types--motor processes organizing action oriented toward physical targets and decision-making processes that select these targets by integrating desire for and knowledge of action outcomes. Even newborns are goal directed in the first sense, but the status of…
Descriptors: Infants, Decision Making, Motivation, Young Children
Zascerinska, Jelena – Online Submission, 2010
Communicative competence is set out to be of the eight key competences which individuals need for personal fulfilment and development, active citizenship, social inclusion and employment (European Commission 2004, p. 3). The success of the sustainable development of communicative competence requires existing concepts of communicative competence…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Lifelong Learning, Educational Innovation, Infants
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Bagner, Daniel M.; Pettit, Jeremy W.; Lewinsohn, Peter M.; Seeley, John R. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2010
Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of maternal depression during the child's first year of life (i.e., sensitive period) on subsequent behavior problems. Method: Participants were 175 mothers participating in the Oregon Adolescent Depression Project (OADP) who met lifetime diagnostic criteria for major depressive…
Descriptors: Check Lists, Behavior Problems, Early Intervention, Pregnancy
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Hogan, Alexandra M.; Virues-Ortega, Javier; Botti, Ana Baya; Bucks, Romola; Holloway, John W.; Rose-Zerilli, Matthew J.; Palmer, Lyle J.; Webster, Rebecca J.; Baldeweg, Torsten; Kirkham, Fenella J. – Developmental Science, 2010
Millions of people currently live at altitudes in excess of 2500 metres, where oxygen supply is limited, but very little is known about the development of brain and behavioural function under such hypoxic conditions. We describe the physiological, cognitive and behavioural profile of a large cohort of infants (6-12 months), children (6-10 years)…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, American Indians, Adolescents, Foreign Countries
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Heron, Michelle; Slaughter, Virginia – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2010
Infants' responses to typical and scrambled human body shapes were assessed in relation to the realism of the human body stimuli presented. In four separate experiments, infants were familiarized to typical human bodies and then shown a series of scrambled human bodies on the test. Looking behaviour was assessed in response to a range of different…
Descriptors: Realism, Visual Stimuli, Infants, Human Body
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Mendelsohn, Alan L.; Brockmeyer, Carolyn A.; Dreyer, Benard P.; Fierman, Arthur H.; Berkule-Silberman, Samantha B.; Tomopoulos, Suzy – Infant and Child Development, 2010
The goal of this study was to determine whether verbal interactions between mothers and their 6-month-old infants during media exposure ("media verbal interactions") might have direct positive impacts, or mitigate any potential adverse impacts of media exposure, on language development at 14 months. For 253 low-income mother-infant dyads…
Descriptors: Verbal Communication, Infants, Language Acquisition, Parent Child Relationship
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Doan, S. N. – Early Child Development and Care, 2010
The way in which emotion interacts with cognition has been of great interest to researchers for hundreds of years. Emotion has been shown to play an important role in attention, learning and memory. However, the way in which emotion influences the basic process of word learning in infancy has largely been ignored. In the current paper, the…
Descriptors: Infants, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Interaction
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O'Reilly, Michelle; Vollmer, Brigitte; Vargha-Khadem, Faraneh; Neville, Brian; Connelly, Alan; Wyatt, John; Timms, Chris; De Haan, Michelle – Developmental Science, 2010
Many studies report chronic deficits in visual processing in children born preterm. We investigated whether functional abnormalities in visual processing exist in children born preterm but without major neuromotor impairment (i.e. cerebral palsy). Twelve such children (less than 33 weeks gestation or birthweight less than 1000 g) without major…
Descriptors: Cognitive Tests, Premature Infants, Visual Acuity, Depth Perception
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Gliga, Teodora; Volein, Agnes; Csibra, Gergely – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
Whether verbal labels help infants visually process and categorize objects is a contentious issue. Using electroencephalography, we investigated whether possessing familiar or novel labels for objects directly enhances 1-year-old children's neural processes underlying the perception of those objects. We found enhanced gamma-band (20-60 Hz)…
Descriptors: Semantics, Infants, Cognitive Processes, Visual Stimuli
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Gilmore, Camilla K.; McCarthy, Shannon E.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2010
Children take years to learn symbolic arithmetic. Nevertheless, non-human animals, human adults with no formal education, and human infants represent approximate number in arrays of objects and sequences of events, and they use these capacities to perform approximate addition and subtraction. Do children harness these abilities when they begin to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Symbols (Mathematics), Kindergarten, Arithmetic
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