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Lane, Liane Wardlow; Ferreira, Victor S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
To what extent do speaker-external communicative pressures versus speaker-internal cognitive pressures affect utterance form? Four experiments measured speakers' references to privately known (i.e., privileged) objects when naming mutually known (i.e., common ground) objects. Although speaker-external communicative pressures demanded that speakers…
Descriptors: Experiments, Cognitive Development, Language Acquisition
Houtkamp, Roos; Roelfsema, Pieter R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
The visual system groups image elements that belong to an object and segregates them from other objects and the background. Important cues for this grouping process are the Gestalt criteria, and most theories propose that these are applied in parallel across the visual scene. Here, we find that Gestalt grouping can indeed occur in parallel in some…
Descriptors: Cues, Visual Perception, Cognitive Development, Attention
Siegel, Daniel J.; Shahmoon-Shanok, Rebecca – Zero to Three (J), 2010
This article integrates ideas about mindsight, developed by Daniel Siegel, with those of reflective supervision in the zero-to-three field. The authors explore how the flow of energy and information in the context of nurturing relationships through reflective supervision supports the capacity to develop mindsight. Mindsight is the ability to have…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Neurological Organization, Cognitive Development, Interpersonal Communication
Gudmundsdottir, Helga Rut – Music Education Research, 2010
The purpose of this paper is to construct a comprehensive review of the research literature in the reading of western staff notation. Studies in music perception, music cognition, music education and music neurology are cited. The aim is to establish current knowledge in music-reading acquisition and what is needed for further progress in this…
Descriptors: Music Reading, Reading Research, Educational Research, Relationship
Over, Harriet; Gattis, Merideth – Cognitive Development, 2010
Using an elicited imitation paradigm, we investigated whether young children imitate the communicative intentions behind speech. Previous research using elicited imitation has shown that children tend to correct ungrammatical sentences. This finding is usually interpreted as evidence that children, like adults, remember and reproduce the gist of…
Descriptors: Sentences, Imitation, Intention, Language Processing
Cebula, K. R.; Moore, D. G.; Wishart, J. G. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2010
Characterising how socio-cognitive abilities develop has been crucial to understanding the wider development of typically developing children. It is equally central to understanding developmental pathways in children with intellectual disabilities such as Down's syndrome. While the process of acquisition of socio-cognitive abilities in typical…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Social Cognition, Child Psychology, Cognitive Development
Barr, Rachel – Developmental Review, 2010
The ability to transfer learning across contexts is an adaptive skill that develops rapidly during early childhood. Learning from television is a specific instance of transfer of learning between a two-dimensional (2D) representation and a three-dimensional (3D) object. Understanding the conditions under which young children might accomplish this…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Transfer of Training, Young Children, Television
Courage, Mary L.; Setliff, Alissa E. – Developmental Review, 2010
The recent increase in the availability of infant-directed video material (e.g., "Baby Einstein") and the corresponding increase in the amount of time that infants and toddlers spend viewing them have prompted concern among parents and professionals that these media might impede aspects of cognitive and social development. In contrast, supporters…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Social Development, Child Development, Television Viewing
Sheridan, Carolin J.; Matuz, Tamara; Draganova, Rossitza; Eswaran, Hari; Preissl, Hubert – Infant and Child Development, 2010
Fetal magnetoencephalography (fMEG) is the only non-invasive method for investigating evoked brain responses and spontaneous brain activity generated by the fetus "in utero". Fetal auditory as well as visual-evoked fields have been successfully recorded in basic stimulus-response studies. Moreover, paradigms investigating precursors for cognitive…
Descriptors: Brain, Developmental Delays, Cognitive Development, Diagnostic Tests
Tytler, Russell; Prain, Vaughan – International Journal of Science Education, 2010
Recent accounts by cognitive scientists of factors affecting cognition imply the need to reconsider current dominant conceptual theories about science learning. These new accounts emphasize the role of context, embodied practices, and narrative-based representation rather than learners' cognitive constructs. In this paper we analyse data from a…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Cognitive Psychology, Science Education, Learning Processes
Howe, Christine; Nunes, Terezinha; Bryant, Peter – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2010
A distinction can be drawn between extensive and intensive quantities. Extensive quantities (e.g., volume, distance), which have been the focus of developmental research, depend upon additive combination. Intensive quantities (e.g., density, speed), which have been relatively neglected, derive from proportional relations between variables. Thus,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Child Development, Developmental Stages, Foreign Countries
Muris, Peter; Mayer, Birgit; Freher, Nancy Kramer; Duncan, Sylvana; van den Hout, Annemiek – Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 2010
The present study examined age-related patterns in children's anxiety-related interpretations and internal attributions of physical symptoms. A large sample of 388 children aged between 4 and 13 years completed a vignette paradigm during which they had to explain the emotional response of the main character who experienced anxiety-related physical…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Anxiety, Cognitive Development, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
Slote, Michael – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
Care ethics, and moral sentimentalism more generally, have not developed a picture of moral education that is comparable in scope or depth to the rationalist/Kantian/Rawlsian account of moral education that has been offered by Lawrence Kohlberg. But it is possible to do so if one borrows from the work of Martin Hoffman and makes systematic use of…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Psychology, Ethics, Empathy
Smith, Susan Lambrecht; Roberts, Jenny A.; Locke, John L.; Tozer, Rebekah – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2010
Babbling between the ages of 8 and 19 months was examined in 19 children, 13 of whom were at high risk for reading disorder (RD) and 6 normally reading children at low familial risk for RD. Development of syllable complexity was examined at five periods across this 11-month window. Results indicated that children who later evidenced RD produced a…
Descriptors: Structural Elements (Construction), Reading Difficulties, Syllables, Infants
McCrink, Koleen; Bloom, Paul; Santos, Laurie R. – Developmental Science, 2010
This study explored the criteria that children and adults use when evaluating the niceness of a character who is distributing resources. Four- and five-year-olds played the "Giving Game", in which two puppets with different amounts of chips each gave some portion of these chips to the children. Adults played an analogous task that mimicked the…
Descriptors: Productivity, Cues, Evaluation Criteria, Personality Traits

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