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Ray, Rebecca D.; Shelton, Amy L.; Hollon, Nick Garber; Michel, Bethany D.; Frankel, Carl B.; Gross, James J.; Gabrieli, John D. E. – Child Development, 2009
Processing the self-relevance of information facilitates recall. Similarly, processing close-other-related information facilitates recall to a lesser degree than processing self-relevant information. This memory advantage may be viewed as an index of the degree to which the representation of self is differentiated from representations of close…
Descriptors: Mothers, Individual Differences, Memory, Cognitive Development
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Kelly, David J.; Liu, Shaoying; Lee, Kang; Quinn, Paul C.; Pascalis, Olivier; Slater, Alan M.; Ge, Liezhong – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
The other-race effect in face processing develops within the first year of life in Caucasian infants. It is currently unknown whether the developmental trajectory observed in Caucasian infants can be extended to other cultures. This is an important issue to investigate because recent findings from cross-cultural psychology have suggested that…
Descriptors: Race, Infants, Cultural Context, Whites
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Butcher, Phillipa R.; van Braeckel, Koen; Bouma, Anke; Einspieler, Christa; Stremmelaar, Elisabeth F.; Bos, Arend F. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2009
Background: The quality of very preterm infants' spontaneous movements at 11 to 16 weeks post-term age is a powerful predictor of their later neurological status. This study investigated whether early spontaneous movements also have predictive value for the intellectual and behavioural problems that children born very preterm often experience.…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Premature Infants, Motion, Human Body
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Brady, Bernadine; O'Regan, Connie – Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2009
The youth mentoring program Big Brothers Big Sisters is one of the first social interventions involving youth in Ireland to be evaluated using a randomized controlled trial methodology. This article sets out the design process undertaken, describing how the research team came to adopt a concurrent embedded mixed methods design as a means of…
Descriptors: Mentors, Intervention, Foreign Countries, Educational Technology
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Kopp, Claire B. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
This chapter explores paths toward emotion-focused coping among typically developing young children and their more or less average parents--portraying characteristic developmental patterns, demands, and stresses. Emotion-focused coping strategies are effortful and aim to decrease negative emotions in stress-inducing interpersonal contexts. The…
Descriptors: Young Children, Coping, Stress Variables, Child Development
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Nardini, Marko; Thomas, Rhiannon L.; Knowland, Victoria C. P.; Braddick, Oliver J.; Atkinson, Janette – Cognition, 2009
Reorientation tasks, in which disoriented participants attempt to relocate objects using different visual cues, have previously been understood to depend on representing aspects of the global organisation of the space, for example its major axis for judgements based on geometry. Careful analysis of the visual information available for these tasks…
Descriptors: Cues, Spatial Ability, Task Analysis, Inferences
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Arellano, Eduardo Casillas; Torre, Monica F.; Valentine, Kathryn – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2009
Research about the benefits of interactional diversity in college has been conducted at various U.S. institutions, but little research has focused on border colleges. This study explores the extent to which students at U.S.-Mexico border institutions reported having cross-racial and cross-ethnic interactions that researchers suggest promote…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Diversity, Racial Relations, Foreign Countries
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Schaffer, Megan; Clark, Stephanie; Jeglic, Elizabeth L. – Crime & Delinquency, 2009
This study examined the relationship among parenting, empathy, and antisocial behavior. Two hundred forty-four undergraduate students attending an urban university completed self-report questionnaires assessing their antisocial behavior, empathy, and mothers' and fathers' parenting styles. Support was found for a model in which maternal permissive…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Urban Universities, Antisocial Behavior, Parenting Styles
Coffey, Suzanne R. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2009
Two educations are available to those who are fortunate enough to continue their athletic careers at the nation's colleges and universities. The first kind, the most obvious and most important, is the education garnered when students are challenged to excel, experiment and stretch intellectually. Many faculty colleagues see this principal…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Athletics, Athletes, Academic Aspiration
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Nippold, Marilyn A. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2009
Purpose: This study examined language productivity and syntactic complexity in school-age children in relation to their knowledge of the topic of discussion--the game of chess. Method: Children (N = 32; mean age = 10;11 [years;months]) who played chess volunteered to be interviewed by an adult examiner who had little or no experience playing…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Form Classes (Languages), Children, Games
Payne, Ruby – Phi Delta Kappan, 2009
Ruby Payne refutes allegations that her work is built on "stereotyping" and negative depictions of poverty. Instead, she says her work is built on a theory of cognitive determinism, that is, a belief that everyone has a mind and educators are able to develop every mind if they understand learning styles for children of poverty.
Descriptors: Poverty, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Learning Processes
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Christodoulou, Joanna A.; Daley, Samantha G.; Katzir, Tami – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2009
The theme of Usable Knowledge in Mind, Brain, and Education will be a special section that will appear regularly in the journal. The section will focus on the synergistic connections between biology, cognitive science, and human development on the one hand and educational thought, policy, and practice on the other. Efforts to create usable…
Descriptors: Theory Practice Relationship, Educational Practices, Brain, Cognitive Psychology
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Simner, Julia; Harrold, Jenny; Creed, Harriet; Monro, Louise; Foulkes, Louise – Brain, 2009
We show that the neurological condition of synaesthesia--which causes fundamental differences in perception and cognition throughout a lifetime--is significantly represented within the childhood population, and that it manifests behavioural markers as young as age 6 years. Synaesthesia gives rise to a merging of cognitive and/or sensory functions…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Incidence, Graphemes, Identification
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Kaldy, Zsuzsa; Blaser, Erik – Infancy, 2009
What kind of featural information do infants rely on when they are trying to recognize a previously seen object? The question of whether infants use certain features (e.g., shape or color) more than others (e.g., luminance) can only be studied legitimately if visual salience is controlled, as the magnitude of feature values--how noticeable and…
Descriptors: Age, Identification, Infants, Visual Stimuli
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Ebersbach, Mirjam – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Although J. Piaget (1968) assumed that children up to 7 years old are unable to consider more than 1 stimulus dimension in their judgments, subsequent research has demonstrated that preschoolers can consider 2 dimensions, such as the width and length of rectangles to estimate their area (F. Wilkening, 1979). The present study addressed the…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Grade 3, Preschool Children, Grade 1
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