Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 0 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 0 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 9 |
Descriptor
| Hypothesis Testing | 9 |
| Brain Hemisphere Functions | 3 |
| Elementary School Students | 3 |
| Individual Differences | 3 |
| Attention | 2 |
| Bias | 2 |
| Children | 2 |
| Concept Formation | 2 |
| Dyslexia | 2 |
| Infants | 2 |
| Language Acquisition | 2 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
| Developmental Science | 9 |
Author
| Arnett, Anne B. | 1 |
| Braithwaite, David W. | 1 |
| Brase, Julia | 1 |
| Buss, Aaron T. | 1 |
| Byrne, Brian | 1 |
| Cimpian, Andrei | 1 |
| Cremone, Amanda | 1 |
| Csépe, Valéria | 1 |
| Fraticelli-Torres, Ada | 1 |
| Gooch, Debbie | 1 |
| Hulme, Charles | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 9 |
| Reports - Research | 9 |
Education Level
| Elementary Education | 2 |
| Grade 4 | 1 |
Audience
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
| Wechsler Intelligence Scales… | 1 |
| Wide Range Achievement Test | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Mani, Nivedita; Schreiner, Melanie S.; Brase, Julia; Köhler, Katrin; Strassen, Katrin; Postin, Danilo; Schultze, Thomas – Developmental Science, 2021
Developmental research, like many fields, is plagued by low sample sizes and inconclusive findings. The problem is amplified by the difficulties associated with recruiting infant participants for research as well as the increased variability in infant responses. With sequential testing designs providing a viable alternative to paradigms facing…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Infants, Language Acquisition, Vocabulary
Mehr, Samuel A.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Developmental Science, 2018
Five-month-old infants selectively attend to novel people who sing melodies originally learned from a parent, but not melodies learned from a musical toy or from an unfamiliar singing adult, suggesting that music conveys social information to infant listeners. Here, we test this interpretation further in older infants with a more direct measure of…
Descriptors: Infants, Music, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Preferences
Buss, Aaron T.; Spencer, John P. – Developmental Science, 2018
Executive function (EF) is a key cognitive process that emerges in early childhood and facilitates children's ability to control their own behavior. Individual differences in EF skills early in life are predictive of quality-of-life outcomes 30 years later (Moffitt et al., 2011). What changes in the brain give rise to this critical cognitive…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences, Cognitive Ability
Cremone, Amanda; Kurdziel, Laura B. F.; Fraticelli-Torres, Ada; McDermott, Jennifer M.; Spencer, Rebecca M. C. – Developmental Science, 2017
Sleep loss alters processing of emotional stimuli in preschool-aged children. However, the mechanism by which sleep modifies emotional processing in early childhood is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that a nap, compared to an equivalent time spent awake, reduces biases in attention allocation to affective information. Children (n = 43;…
Descriptors: Sleep, Emotional Response, Preschool Children, Hypothesis Testing
Hussak, Larisa J.; Cimpian, Andrei – Developmental Science, 2018
We tested the hypothesis that political attitudes are influenced by an information-processing factor--namely, a bias in the content of everyday explanations. Because many societal phenomena are enormously complex, people's understanding of them often relies on heuristic shortcuts. For instance, when generating explanations for such phenomena…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Bias, Predictor Variables, Ideology
Tóth, Dénes; Csépe, Valéria – Developmental Science, 2017
The present experiments focused on how orthographic processing develops during reading acquisition. Specifically, a large, cross-sectional sample of children from grade 2 to grade 4 was exposed to pairs of words, pseudowords, digit strings, and pseudo-letter (Armenian) strings while their sensitivity to transpositions (T) and substitutions (S) of…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Orthographic Symbols, Reading Processes, Reading Instruction
Peterson, Robin L.; Arnett, Anne B.; Pennington, Bruce F.; Byrne, Brian; Samuelsson, Stefan; Olson, Richard K. – Developmental Science, 2018
Previous research has established that learning to read improves children's performance on reading-related phonological tasks, including phoneme awareness (PA) and nonword repetition. Few studies have investigated whether literacy acquisition also promotes children's rapid automatized naming (RAN). We tested the hypothesis that literacy…
Descriptors: Naming, Phonemic Awareness, Twins, Models
Braithwaite, David W.; Tian, Jing; Siegler, Robert S. – Developmental Science, 2018
Many children fail to master fraction arithmetic even after years of instruction. A recent theory of fraction arithmetic (Braithwaite, Pyke, & Siegler, 2017) hypothesized that this poor learning of fraction arithmetic procedures reflects poor conceptual understanding of them. To test this hypothesis, we performed three experiments examining…
Descriptors: Fractions, Addition, Arithmetic, Hypothesis Testing
Nash, Hannah M.; Gooch, Debbie; Hulme, Charles; Mahajan, Yatin; McArthur, Genevieve; Steinmetzger, Kurt; Snowling, Margaret J. – Developmental Science, 2017
The "automatic letter-sound integration hypothesis" (Blomert, [Blomert, L., 2011]) proposes that dyslexia results from a failure to fully integrate letters and speech sounds into automated audio-visual objects. We tested this hypothesis in a sample of English-speaking children with dyslexic difficulties (N = 13) and samples of…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Control Groups, Diagnostic Tests

Peer reviewed
Direct link
