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Silberstein, Dalia; Feldman, Ruth; Gardner, Judith M.; Karmel, Bernard Z.; Kuint, Jacob; Geva, Ronny – Infancy, 2009
Although feeding problems are common during infancy and are typically accompanied by relational difficulties, little research observed the mother-infant feeding relationship across the first year as an antecedent to the development of feeding difficulties. We followed 76 low-risk premature infants and their mothers from the transition to oral…
Descriptors: Mothers, Nutrition, Premature Infants, Parent Child Relationship
Lloyd, Marianne E.; Doydum, Ayzit O.; Newcombe, Nora S. – Child Development, 2009
Previous research has suggested that performance for items requiring memory-binding processes improves between ages 4 and 6 (J. Sluzenski, N. Newcombe, & S. L. Kovacs, 2006). The present study suggests that much of this improvement is due to retrieval, as opposed to encoding, deficits for 4-year-olds. Four- and 6-year-old children (N = 48 per age)…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory, Young Children, Task Analysis
Karazsia, Bryan T.; Wildman, Beth G. – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2009
Parenting behaviors have received ample support as a mediator of the relationship between maternal affect and child behavior problems. The majority of these research efforts were based on a uni-dimensional conceptualization of maternal mood, even though decades of theory and research suggest that mood is multidimensional. We examined the mediating…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Child Rearing, Child Behavior, Parent Child Relationship
Kitamura, Christine; Notley, Anna – Developmental Science, 2009
This study investigates the influence of the acoustic properties of vowels on 6- and 10-month-old infants' speech preferences. The shape of the contour (bell or monotonic) and the duration (normal or stretched) of vowels were manipulated in words containing the vowels /i/ and /u/, and presented to infants using a two-choice preference procedure.…
Descriptors: Vowels, Infants, Auditory Perception, Acoustics
Doherty, Martin J.; Anderson, James R.; Howieson, Lynne – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
Two studies examined development of the ability to judge what another person is looking at. In Study 1, 54 2- to 4-year-olds judged where someone was looking in real-life, photograph, and drawing formats. A minority of 2-year-olds, but a majority of older children, passed all tasks, suggesting that the ability arises at around 3 years of age.…
Descriptors: Photography, Eye Movements, Freehand Drawing, Toddlers
Snapp-Childs, Winona; Corbetta, Daniela – Infancy, 2009
Learning to walk is a dynamic process requiring the fine coordination, assembly, and balancing of many body segments at once. For the young walker, coordinating all these behavioral levels may be quite daunting. In this study, we examine the whole-body strategies to which infants resort to produce their first independent steps and progress over…
Descriptors: Infants, Psychomotor Skills, Toddlers, Human Body
Hedegaard, Mariane – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2009
A central dilemma in developmental psychology has been to combine general concepts with research of the individual child in all her complexity in everyday life activities. Psychologists such as Riegel, Bronfenbrenner, Burman, Morss, Hedegaard, and Walkerdine have criticized research approaches that study child development from a functional view.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Activities, Proximity, Immigrants
Andrews, Glenda; Halford, Graeme S.; Murphy, Karen; Knox, Kathy – Cognitive Development, 2009
Young children's integration of weight and distance information was examined using a new methodology that combines a single-armed apparatus with functional measurement. Weight and distance values were varied factorially across the item set. Children estimated how far the beam would tilt when different numbers of weights were placed at different…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Measurement, Thinking Skills, Developmental Stages
Burgund, E. Darcy – Cognitive Development, 2009
Repetition priming refers to the facilitation of stimulus processing due to prior processing of the same or similar stimulus, and is one of the most primitive ways in which experience and practice can affect performance. Previous studies have produced contradictory results regarding the stability of repetition priming across development. Drawing…
Descriptors: Reading Ability, Priming, Experiments, Age Differences
Lindsey, Eric W.; Cremeens, Penny R.; Colwell, Malinda J.; Caldera, Yvonne M. – Social Development, 2009
The aim of the present investigation was to examine parent-child synchrony and its link to children's communicative competence and self-control. Data were collected from 80 families with toddler age children (41 girls, 39 boys) during a laboratory assessment. Five components of parent-child dyadic synchrony were assessed during a semi-structured…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Communicative Competence (Languages), Self Control, Toddlers
Lind, Sophie E.; Bowler, Dermot M. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2009
This study aimed to investigate temporally extended self-awareness (awareness of one's place in and continued existence through time) in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), using the delayed self-recognition (DSR) paradigm (Povinelli et al., Child Development 67:1540-1554, 1996). Relative to age and verbal ability matched comparison children, children…
Descriptors: Autism, Verbal Ability, Child Development, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Corriveau, Kathleen H.; Harris, Paul L.; Meins, Elizabeth; Fernyhough, Charles; Arnott, Bronia; Elliott, Lorna; Liddle, Beth; Hearn, Alexandra; Vittorini, Lucia; de Rosnay, Marc – Child Development, 2009
In a longitudinal study of attachment, children (N = 147) aged 50 and 61 months heard their mother and a stranger make conflicting claims. In 2 tasks, the available perceptual cues were equally consistent with either person's claim but children generally accepted the mother's claims over those of the stranger. In a 3rd task, the perceptual cues…
Descriptors: Cues, Mothers, Attachment Behavior, Trust (Psychology)
Maternal Reminiscing Style during Early Childhood Predicts the Age of Adolescents' Earliest Memories
Jack, Fiona; MacDonald, Shelley; Reese, Elaine; Hayne, Harlene – Child Development, 2009
Individual differences in parental reminiscing style are hypothesized to have long-lasting effects on children's autobiographical memory development, including the age of their earliest memories. This study represents the first prospective test of this hypothesis. Conversations about past events between 17 mother-child dyads were recorded on…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Mothers, Young Children, Adolescents
Pica, Rae – Young Children, 2009
It is important for teachers to make the activities they present, including games, opportunities to promote children's development in one or more domains. Teachers need to select games that are developmentally appropriate. It is relatively simple to modify traditional games, such as Musical Chairs or Simon Says, to be cooperative instead of…
Descriptors: Games, Developmental Stages, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Child Development
Miller, Sarah; Eakin, Angela – Campbell Systematic Reviews, 2011
Social disadvantage is not simply a question of income poverty but is a combination of deprivation and social exclusion (Saunders 2006). Those living in poverty, lone parents (Saunders 2006) and minority ethnic groups (which is often confounded with poverty) are all at risk of social disadvantage (Bradley 2001a). Social disadvantage can have a…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Poverty, Early Intervention, Access to Education

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