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Peer reviewedWeiner, Alan S. – Child Development, 1975
Differences in the rates of visual information-processing in 8- and 10-year-old reflective and impulsive children were measured. (JMB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Tempo, Elementary Education, Reaction Time
Peer reviewedGeis, Mary Fulcher; Hall, Donald M. – Child Development, 1978
First and fifth graders' incidental free and cued recall were tested after an orienting task in which semantic and acoustic encoding were constrained for different words by requiring the children to answer questions about either the words' meanings or sounds. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students, Memory, Recall (Psychology)
Peer reviewedFarkas, Mitchell S. – Child Development, 1978
First and fifth graders sorted cards into two piles based on the orientation of a T figure. Sorting took place in the presence of irrelevant information which did or did not contrast in line slope with the target, or in the absence of irrelevant information. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Classification, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedShultz, Thomas R.; Ravinsky, Frances B. – Child Development, 1977
This study examined the general importance of similarity in children's causal reasoning and the relation between similarity and the other principles of causal inference. Participants were 16 boys and 16 girls at each of four grade levels: K, 2, 4, and 6. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students, Fundamental Concepts
Peer reviewedInagaki, Kayoko; Hatano, Giyoo – Child Development, 1987
Results of two experiments on kindergarten children in Japan indicate that young children can, and often do, apply personification as an analogy to animate objects to generate a reasonable prediction. It was also found that children try to constrain the personification by using additional knowledge. (PCB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedMiller, Patricia H.; And Others – Child Development, 1986
A developmental progression in 6-, 8-, and 10-year-old children's use of strategies for gathering information was revealed in a study involving partial recall, total recall, and similarity/difference judgments. When subjects chose stimuli for exposure from an array, older children showed more ability to match strategy to task demands. Strategy…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedAsarnow, Robert F.; Sherman, Tracy – Child Development, 1984
Results of three experiments suggest that groups of schizophrenic, younger normal, and older normal children used a serial information-processing strategy while performing on a partial report version of a span of apprehension task. Impairment of schizophrenic children on the partial report versions seemed to reflect inefficiencies in the…
Descriptors: Attention, Children, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedSelman, Robert L. – Child Development, 1971
Reports two studies whose purpose was to explore the relationship in middle childhood of the child's ability to take the role of another and his ability to make qualitatively higher-level moral judgments. (WY)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Identification (Psychology), Interpersonal Relationship, Moral Values
Peer reviewedCommons, Michael L.; And Others – Child Development, 1982
Modes of cognition are postulated consisting of third- and fourth-order operations; these are hypothesized to be qualitatively different from, and hierarchically related to, the form of reasoning characterized as formal operational by Inhelder and Piaget. An instrument was developed to assess these modes of cognition. (RH)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Graduate Students, Measures (Individuals)
Peer reviewedFuson, Karen C.; And Others – Child Development, 1983
In the first experiment, observations were made of children ages four-and-a-half to five-and-a-half years of age who were induced to use counting or matching in a Piagetian number conservation task. The spontaneous matching and counting behavior of a more mature but not yet conserving sample was investigated in the second experiment. (RH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computation, Conservation (Concept), Numbers
Peer reviewedMartin, Carol Lynn; Halverson, Charles F., Jr. – Child Development, 1983
A total of 48 children from five to six years of age were shown pictures of males and females performing sex-consistent and sex-inconsistent activities. Children were tested a week later for recall of these activities and the sex of the actor performing them. Sex-consistent activities were found to be more memorable than sex-inconsistent…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Performance, Sex Differences
Peer reviewedPerner, Josef; Mansbridge, David G. – Child Development, 1983
Children ages 6 to 13 and college students were asked to remember length relationships for three pairs of sticks. For six- and seven-year-olds, relationships between interlinked pairs were much more difficult to retain than were relationships between unrelated pairs. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedKemler, Deborah G. – Child Development, 1982
Three experiments were conducted to examine normal preschool and retarded children's use of similarity relations (two items go together because overall they are the most similar in a given set of stimuli) or dimensional relations (two items go together because they are the same size) as a predominant basis for classification. (MP)
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedWaber, Deborah P.; And Others – Child Development, 1982
A chronometric mental rotation paradigm was applied to examine manipulation of visual imagery in early adolescents in relation to age, sex, mental rotation ability, and socioeconomic background. Subjects were fifth- and seventh-grade boys and girls from a middle and lower socioeconomic background. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Imagery, Performance Factors
Peer reviewedMartin, Carol Lynn; Halverson, Charles F., Jr. – Child Development, 1981
A model is proposed in which stereotypes are assumed to function as schemas that serve to organize and structure information. The thesis is advanced that sex stereotyping is a normal cognitive process and is best examined in terms of information-processing constructs. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Processes, Models


