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Peer reviewedGardner, D.; And Others – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 1988
Investigated Japanese children's understanding of the difference between real and apparent emotion. Children aged four to six years listened to and answered questions about stories in which the protagonist masked strong emotions. Results showed six-year-olds understood real versus apparent emotion more systematically than did four-year-olds. (SKC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Foreign Countries, Psychological Studies
Peer reviewedSlavenas, Rosemarie – Early Child Development and Care, 1985
Briefly highlights the artificial dualism between the affective and cognitive areas of human functioning in terms of history, physiology, and psychology. Previews topics of current research and theory in the area of social/emotional development. (DST)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Foreign Countries, Social Cognition
Peer reviewedMukerji, Rose – Young Children, 1971
Television for children can help them broaden their experiences, develop values and understand more about human feelings. An example of this type of educational television is Ripples," a series of 15-minute color programs for in-school viewing by children in kindergarten and early primary grades. (AJ)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Educational Television, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedLewis, Michael; And Others – Child Development, 1989
Investigates the relationship between self-recognition and self-evaluative emotions in two studies on 27 children aged 9-24 months and 44 children aged 22 months. The results of both studies indicate that embarrassment but not wariness was related to self-recognition. (RJC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Fear, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedNoppe, Illene C. – Developmental Review, 2000
Presents a developmental model integrating attachment theory and cognitive developmental approaches in order to further understanding of the processes involved in loss and grief. Considers the relevance of attachment theory to understanding grief and research evidence for the role of continuing attachment bonds after death as a strategy for…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Grief
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2007
The foundations of brain architecture are established early in life through a continuous series of dynamic interactions in which environmental conditions and personal experiences have a significant impact on how genetic predispositions are expressed. Because specific experiences affect specific brain circuits during specific developmental…
Descriptors: Child Development, Neurological Organization, Cognitive Development, Experience
Posner, Michael I.; Rothbart, Mary K.; Sheese, Brad E. – Developmental Science, 2007
A major problem for developmental science is understanding how the cognitive and emotional networks important in carrying out mental processes can be related to individual differences. The last five years have seen major advances in establishing links between alleles of specific genes and the neural networks underlying aspects of attention. These…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Cognitive Processes
Love, John M. – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2010
The Early Head Start evaluation included 17 sites drawn from the first two waves of programs started more than a decade ago. By design, the Administration on Children, Youth and Families (ACYF) selected programs that would reflect the range of service options and context of all extant program rather than choosing a representative sample. The sites…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Disadvantaged Youth, Pregnancy, Preschool Children
Nagy, Emese; Kompagne, Hajnalka; Orvos, Hajnalka; Pal, Attila – Infant and Child Development, 2007
Socio-emotional behaviour is in part sex-related in humans, although the contribution of the biological and socio-cultural factors is not yet known. This study explores sex-related differences during the earliest communicative exchange, the neonatal imitation in 43 newborn infants (3-96 hours old) using an index finger extension imitative gesture.…
Descriptors: Metabolism, Imitation, Neonates, Social Environment
Gordon, Edmund W., Ed. – 1965
This issue of the IRCD Bulletin is devoted to a bibliography on the emotional and social development of socially disadvantaged children. The bibliography should be viewed as a companion to a previous one (UD 007 841) in which the focus was on cognitive development, for both the cognitive and the affective aspects of development should be regarded…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Disadvantaged Youth
Peer reviewedHarter, Susan; Buddin, Bonnie Johns – Developmental Psychology, 1987
This study documented a developmental model of children's understanding of the simultaneity of two emotions. Fourteen children at each of the nine age levels from 4 to 12 were studied. Children were questioned about (1) two emotions of same valence directed at the same target, (2) same valence/different target, (3) different valence/different…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedRomero, Carol – Language Arts, 1976
Literature about death can help children to understand and accept death; bibliographies are included for primary reading, intermediate reading, and adult to child reading. (DD)
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Children, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedSimpson, Evan – Human Development, 1983
Uses Rousseau's "Emile" to explicate Kohlberg's characterization of moral development and to illuminate several theoretical problems in Kohlberg's cognitive-developmental account. Analysis supports contentions that Kohlberg's concept of morality is unduly narrow and suggests that his one-sidedly rationalistic approach exaggerates the…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Education
Peer reviewedBarnett, Douglas; Ratner, Hilary Horn – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Describes psychological approaches to study of cognition and emotion, identifies issues that may provide direction to understanding the organization and integration of cognition and emotion in development. Maintains that an integrative model for the study of "cogmotion" is needed, suggesting that cogmotion research will contribute to the exchange…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedRuffman, Ted; Keenan, Thomas R. – Developmental Psychology, 1996
Three experiments using "backward reasoning" found that: age differences occurred in predicting surprise relative to false belief; by age five or six, children claim that surprise occurs when gaining knowledge where one was previously ignorant or held a false belief; by age seven to nine, they understand that surprise will more likely…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Child Behavior, Child Development, Children

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