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Demir, Ozlem Ece; Levine, Susan C.; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Developmental Science, 2010
Children with pre- or perinatal brain injury (PL) exhibit marked plasticity for language learning. Previous work has focused mostly on the emergence of earlier-developing skills, such as vocabulary and syntax. Here we ask whether this plasticity for earlier-developing aspects of language extends to more complex, later-developing language functions…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Syntax, Injuries, Brain
Hobson, Jessica A.; Harris, Ruth; Garcia-Perez, Rosa; Hobson, R. Peter – Developmental Science, 2009
There has been substantial research on children's empathic responsiveness towards distressed people, and on the limited responsiveness of children with autism. To date, however, there have not been experimental studies to test how far children show concern towards someone who might be "expected" to feel badly, when that person has "not" (yet)…
Descriptors: Autism, Mental Retardation, Empathy, Matched Groups
Liebal, Kristin; Behne, Tanya; Carpenter, Malinda; Tomasello, Michael – Developmental Science, 2009
We investigated whether 1-year-old infants use their shared experience with an adult to determine the meaning of a pointing gesture. In the first study, after two adults had each shared a different activity with the infant, one of the adults pointed to a target object. Eighteen- but not 14-month-olds responded appropriately to the pointing gesture…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Infants, Language Acquisition, Adults
Kaminski, Juliane; Tempelmann, Sebastian; Call, Josep; Tomasello, Michael – Developmental Science, 2009
A key skill in early human development is the ability to comprehend communicative intentions as expressed in both nonlinguistic gestures and language. In the current studies, we confronted domestic dogs (some of whom knew many human "words") with a task in which they had to infer the intended referent of a human's communicative act via iconic…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Stages, Animals, Communication Skills
Schoner, Gregor; Dineva, Evelina – Developmental Science, 2007
That competences may emerge given appropriate environmental and behavioral context is a long-standing theme in developmental research. Work in the motor domain, but also in cognitive development, has made it possible to transform this idea into a mechanistic account closely linked to empirical evidence. In dynamic systems thinking, such capacities…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Learning Processes, Physical Activity Level, Motor Development
Kadosh, Roi Cohen; Henik, Avishai; Walsh, Vincent – Developmental Science, 2009
The question why synaesthesia, an atypical binding within or between modalities, occurs is both enduring and important. Two explanations have been provided: (1) a congenital explanation: we are all born as synaesthetes but most of us subsequently lose the experience due to brain development; (2) a learning explanation: synaesthesia is related to…
Descriptors: Perception, Language, Color, Sensory Experience
Nurmsoo, Erika; Robinson, Elizabeth J. – Developmental Science, 2009
In three experiments (N = 123; 148; 28), children observed a video in which two speakers offered alternative labels for unfamiliar objects. In Experiment 1, 3- to 5-year-olds endorsed the label given by a speaker who had previously labeled familiar objects accurately, rather than that given by a speaker with a history of inaccurate labeling, even…
Descriptors: Children, Video Technology, Films, Young Children
Riggins, Tracy; Miller, Neely C.; Bauer, Patricia J.; Georgieff, Michael K.; Nelson, Charles A. – Developmental Science, 2009
The ability to recall contextual details associated with an event begins to develop in the first year of life, yet adult levels of recall are not reached until early adolescence. Dual-process models of memory suggest that the distinct retrieval process that supports the recall of such contextual information is recollection. In the present…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Infants, Children, Memory
Robertson, Steven S.; Johnson, Sarah L. – Developmental Science, 2009
Does real time coupling between mental and physical activity early in development have functional significance? To address this question, we examined the habituation of visual attention and the subsequent response to change in two groups of 3-month-olds with different patterns of movement-attention coupling. In suppressors, the typical decrease in…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Attention, Habituation, Infants
Peelen, Marius V.; Glaser, Bronwyn; Vuilleumier, Patrik; Eliez, Stephan – Developmental Science, 2009
Viewing faces or bodies activates category-selective areas of visual cortex, including the fusiform face area (FFA), fusiform body area (FBA), and extrastriate body area (EBA). Here, using fMRI, we investigate the development of these areas, focusing on the right FFA and FBA. Despite the overlap of functionally defined FFA and FBA (54%-75%…
Descriptors: Human Body, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Child Development, Developmental Stages
Mahajan, Neha; Barnes, Jennifer L.; Blanco, Marissa; Santos, Laurie R. – Developmental Science, 2009
Both human infants and adult non-human primates share the capacity to track small numbers of objects across time and occlusion. The question now facing developmental and comparative psychologists is whether similar mechanisms give rise to this capacity across the two populations. Here, we explore whether non-human primates' object tracking…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Infants, Primatology, Object Permanence
Gergely, Gyorgy; Egyed, Katalin; Kiraly, Ildiko – Developmental Science, 2007
Humans are adapted to spontaneously transfer relevant cultural knowledge to conspecifics and to fast-learn the contents of such teaching through a human-specific social learning system called "pedagogy" ( Csibra & Gergely, 2006). Pedagogical knowledge transfer is triggered by specific communicative cues (such as eye-contact, contingent reactivity,…
Descriptors: Cues, Socialization, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Infants
Siegler, Robert S. – Developmental Science, 2007
Children's thinking is highly variable at every level of analysis, from neural and associative levels to the level of strategies, theories, and other aspects of high-level cognition. This variability exists within people as well as between them; individual children often rely on different strategies or representations on closely related problems…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes, Children, Neurological Organization
Diamond, Adele – Developmental Science, 2007
The possibilities for building and nourishing connections among the social, cultural, neuroscientific, biological, and cognitive sciences in the service of understanding children and their development are tremendously exciting. Crossing, and integrating across, disciplinary boundaries, especially those disciplines relating to biology/neuroscience,…
Descriptors: Motor Development, Cognitive Science, Children, Biology
Finlay, Barbara L. – Developmental Science, 2007
The marriage of evolution and development to produce the new discipline "evo-devo" in biology is situated in the general history of evolutionary biology, and its significance for developmental cognitive science is discussed. The discovery and description of the highly conserved, robust and "evolvable" mechanisms that organize the vertebrate body…
Descriptors: Evolution, Physiology, Biology, Cognitive Psychology

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