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Gelman, Susan A.; Ebeling, Karen S. – Cognition, 1998
Two studies examined the hypothesis that children rely on name representations, often indexed by shape, in their semantic representations. Results suggest that, although shape plays an important role in children's early naming, other factors are also important, including the mental state of the picture's creator (whether intentional or not).…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Intention, Preschool Children, Semantics
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Aronson, James N.; Golomb, Claire – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Four studies replicated Lillard's paradigm for studying preschoolers' understanding of pretense. Results indicated that decreasing contradictory information increased the incidence of correct judgments, suggesting an implicitly representational understanding of pretense. Findings challenge Lillard's conceptual analysis of pretense and suggest that…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Preschool Children, Research Methodology
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Povinelli, Daniel J.; Landry, Anita M.; Theall, Laura A.; Clark, Britten R.; Castille, Conni M. – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Six experiments examined young children's understanding that very recent past events determine the present. Found that 4-year-olds, but not 3-year-olds, could locate a puppet they had observed being hidden either through a videotape or using a verbal analog of the task. When children observed 2 events in which they participated, only 5-year-olds…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Proximity, Time
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Schlottmann, Anne – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Two studies investigated how 5- to 10-year-olds integrate perceptual causality with their knowledge of the underlying causal mechanism, using two devices in which a bell would ring when a ball was dropped in, either immediately or after a delay, depending on the mechanism inside. Findings suggest a link between temporal contiguity and causality in…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Children, Cognitive Development, Perception
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Moses, Louis J. – Child Development, 2001
Distinguishes two types of executive theories: (1) emergence accounts; and (2) expression accounts. Asserts that the meta-analytic findings reported by Wellman, Cross, and Watson (2001) are fully consistent with emergence accounts of theory of mind and do not entirely rule out expression accounts. (Author/KB)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Performance Factors
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Moses, Louis J.; Baldwin, Dare A.; Rosicky, Julie G.; Tidball, Glynnis – Child Development, 2001
Examined in two studies referential understanding in 12- and 18-month-olds' responses to another's emotional outburst. Found that infants relied on the presence versus absence of referential cues to determine whether an emotional message should be linked with a salient object and they actively consulted referential cues to disambiguate the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cues, Emotional Development, Infants
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Legerstee, Maria – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Maintains author's interpretation of 6-month-olds' behavior is consistent with task requirements in the 2000 study and previous work showing that infants use explanatory inferences to make sense of their world. Asserts that ability to understand that people communicate with persons but act on objects is precursor to infants' understanding at 9 to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants, Inferences
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Hala, Suzanne; Russell, James – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Three studies examined how reducing the executive function demands of a measure of strategic deception, the windows task, would affect 3-year-olds' performance. Findings demonstrated that providing an artificial response medium, even in the presence of an opponent, and having children play in partnership enabled them to adopt a successful…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Deception, Inhibition, Performance Factors
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Winch, Christopher – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2002
Jim McKenzie's reply to the author's paper suggests that there are substantial areas of disagreement between US. McKenzie appears to agree with the central philosophical point that the author wished to make, that internal representationalism is incoherent. The author's target was that set of doctrines known as "cognitivism", which is based on the…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Education, Instruction
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Plantinga, Judy; Trainor, Laurel J. – Cognition, 2005
Pitch perception is fundamental to melody in music and prosody in speech. Unlike many animals, the vast majority of human adults store melodic information primarily in terms of relative not absolute pitch, and readily recognize a melody whether rendered in a high or a low pitch range. We show that at 6 months infants are also primarily relative…
Descriptors: Infants, Music, Auditory Perception, Cognitive Development
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Wellman, Henry M.; Liu, David – Child Development, 2004
Two studies address the sequence of understandings evident in preschoolers' developing theory of mind. The first, preliminary study provides a meta-analysis of research comparing different types of mental state understandings (e.g., desires vs. beliefs, ignorance vs. false belief). The second, primary study tests a theory-of-mind scale for…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Preschool Children, Measurement Techniques, Mathematical Models
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Apperly, Ian. A.; Williams, Emily; Williams, Joelle – Child Development, 2004
In 4 experiments 120 three-to four-year-old non readers were asked the identity of a symbolic representation as it appeared with different objects. Consistent with Bialystok (2000), many children judged the identity of written words to vary according to the object with which they appeared but few made such errors with recognizable pictures.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Preschool Children, Symbolic Learning, Pattern Recognition
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Eisbach, Anne O'Donnell – Child Development, 2004
This research explored the development of one insight about the mind, namely, the belief that people's trains of thought differ even when they see the same stimulus. In Study 1, 5-year-olds, 9-year-olds, and adults heard stories about characters who saw the same object. Although the older groups predicted the object would trigger different trains…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Adults, Infants, Young Children
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Horst, Jessica S.; Oakes, Lisa M.; Madole, Kelly L. – Child Development, 2005
Despite a large body of research demonstrating the kinds of categories to which infants respond, few studies have directly assessed how infants' categorization unfolds over time. Four experiments used a visual familiarization task to evaluate 10-month-old infants' (N=98) learning of exemplars characterized by commonalities in appearance or…
Descriptors: Infants, Classification, Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
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Petersson, Gunilla – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2005
This study describes how medical and nursing students develop their conceptions and understanding of science during 3 years of study at the academic level. The point of departure is the students' commonsense conceptions at the start of the undergraduate programme, which are seen as alternative ways of thinking to the more theoretical explanatory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Piagetian Theory, Nursing Students, Cognitive Development
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