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| Cognitive Processes | 4 |
| Conservation (Concept) | 4 |
| Serial Ordering | 4 |
| Concept Formation | 3 |
| Cognitive Development | 2 |
| Elementary School Students | 2 |
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| Abstract Reasoning | 1 |
| Adolescents | 1 |
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| Reports - Research | 3 |
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Flora, June Annette – 1976
Kindergarten and first-grade children participated in a study of the role of reciprocal and inversion reversibility in language acquisition and cognitive development. Subjects completed cognitive tasks assessing conservation, seriation, and class inclusion, and language tasks assessing the active-passive transformation and the negative…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Conservation (Concept), Doctoral Dissertations
Peer reviewedSpitz, Herman H.; And Others – Intelligence, 1982
Demonstrated is a covariance principle that causes the observer to assume that if one aspect of a two-dimensional figure (its perimeter or its area) is conserved, the other aspect must also be conserved (pseudo-conservation). Mentally retarded individuals, assuming no such fixed relationship, correctly judged the changed state of the nonconserved…
Descriptors: Adults, Analysis of Covariance, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Transitive Inferences within Seriation Problems Assessed by Explanations, Judgments, and Strategies.
Moore, Gary W. – 1978
A study was designed to develop an instrument and methodological procedure to assess transitive relations within seriation problems in elementary school children using three criteria: explanations, judgments, and strategies. A secondary analysis to assess transitivity used the three criteria according to whether the children were conservers, in…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedLister, Caroline; And Others – Early Child Development and Care, 1996
Through seriation, verbal seriation, and conservation tasks, investigated blind, partially sighted, and sighted children's understanding of quantity. Subjects were 81 children equally dispersed through these 3 groups. Age range was 4 to 17 years. Found similarity in concept acquisition among three groups that extended beyond quantity conservation…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Blindness, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes


