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Hamlin, J. Kiley; Hallinan, Elizabeth V.; Woodward, Amanda L. – Developmental Science, 2008
In the current study, we tested whether 7-month-old infants would selectively imitate the goal-relevant aspects of an observed action. Infants saw an experimenter perform an action on one of two small toys and then were given the opportunity to act on the toys. Infants viewed actions that were either goal-directed or goal-ambiguous, and that…
Descriptors: Infants, Toys, Imitation, Visual Stimuli
Seidl, Amanda; Cristia, Alejandrina – Developmental Science, 2008
Previous research has shown that the weighting of, or attention to, acoustic cues at the level of the segment changes over the course of development ( Nittrouer & Miller, 1997; Nittrouer, Manning & Meyer, 1993). In this paper we examined changes over the course of development in weighting of acoustic cues at the suprasegmental level. Specifically,…
Descriptors: Cues, Suprasegmentals, Vowels, Acoustics
Maguire, Mandy J.; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Golinkoff, Roberta Michnick; Brandone, Amanda C. – Developmental Science, 2008
One of the most prominent theories for why children struggle to learn verbs is that verb learning requires the abstraction of relations between an object and its action (Gentner, 2003). Two hypotheses suggest how children extract relations to extend a novel verb: (1) seeing "many different" exemplars allows children to detect the invariant…
Descriptors: Verbs, Child Development, Young Children, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
Deacon, S. Helene – Developmental Science, 2008
All developmental research needs to carefully consider how children's knowledge is measured. The study of children's knowledge of spelling conventions, or the ways in which the English orthography encodes the roots and affixes and the sounds in words, is no exception. This experiment examined the extent of 7- to 9-year-old children's knowledge of…
Descriptors: Spelling, Morphemes, Knowledge Level, Developmental Stages
Markson, Lori; Diesendruck, Gil; Bloom, Paul – Developmental Science, 2008
When children learn the name of a novel object, they tend to extend that name to other objects similar in shape--a phenomenon referred to as the shape bias. Does the shape bias stem from learned associations between names and categories of objects, or does it derive from more general properties of children's understanding of language and the…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Bias, Geometric Concepts
Berger, Lawrence M.; Brown, Patricia R.; Joung, Eunhee; Melli, Marygold S.; Wimer, Lynn – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2008
This study uses administrative data from the Wisconsin Court Record Database, linked with survey data collected from mothers (n= 789) and fathers (n= 690), to describe the living arrangements of children with sole mother and shared child physical placement following parental divorce. Contrary to prior research, results provide little evidence that…
Descriptors: Divorce, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Fathers
Reynolds, Matthew R.; Keith, Timothy Z.; Ridley, Kristen P.; Patel, Puja G. – Intelligence, 2008
Sex differences in the latent general and broad abilities underlying the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children-Second Edition (KABC-II) were investigated for children and youth ages 6 through 18. The data were split into different age groups to account for changes due to differential development. Multi-group higher-order analysis of mean and…
Descriptors: Age, Spatial Ability, Gender Differences, Cognitive Ability
Hendrix, Marie – Exchange: The Early Childhood Leaders' Magazine Since 1978, 2008
Each day quality child care programs strive to provide for the nutritional well being of their children. Staff thoughtfully prepare menus that target balanced diets and address caloric needs. Careful consideration to nutritional value and safety guides the process of selecting and preparing food. The outcome is appealing, developmentally…
Descriptors: Nutrition, Well Being, Eating Habits, Child Development
Liu, David; Wellman, Henry M.; Tardif, Twila; Sabbagh, Mark A. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
Theory of mind is claimed to develop universally among humans across cultures with vastly different folk psychologies. However, in the attempt to test and confirm a claim of universality, individual studies have been limited by small sample sizes, sample specificities, and an overwhelming focus on Anglo-European children. The current meta-analysis…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Asians, North Americans, Cognitive Development
Scrutton, David – Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2008
Deformities in the child with cerebral palsy have been ascribed to muscle imbalance (Sharrard 1961) and increased tone (Pollock 1959) or to the type of cerebral palsy (Bobath and Bobath 1975). As far as we know, the position in which the child is nursed, especially during the first year of life, has not been considered as a cause of deformity. It…
Descriptors: Cerebral Palsy, Children, Infants, Perinatal Influences
Zhang, Renjie – Frontiers of Education in China, 2008
Moral socialization of students consists of five elements: process, subject, agent, content and pattern. This paper discusses the studies of the former three: their progress and perplexities, covering the following puzzles: "Why does the youth socialization take longer time?" "Are there any critical periods in student…
Descriptors: Socialization, Moral Values, Foreign Countries, Developmental Stages
Rakison, David H.; Lupyan, Gary – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 2008
We present a domain-general framework called "constrained attentional associative learning" to provide a developmental account for how and when infants form concepts for animates and inanimates that encapsulate not only their surface appearance but also their movement characteristics. Six simulations with the same general-purpose architecture…
Descriptors: Infants, Infant Behavior, Associative Learning, Motion
Murray, Lynne; Hentges, Francoise; Hill, Jonathan; Karpf, Janne; Mistry, Beejal; Kreutz, Marianne; Woodall, Peter; Moss, Tony; Goodacre, Tim – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2008
Background: Children with cleft lip and palate are at risk for psychological problems. Difficulties in mother-child interactions may be relevant, and could be affected by the timing of lip repair. Method: We assessed cognitive development, behaviour problems, and attachment in 94 infants with cleft lip (with and without cleft palate) and 96…
Descriptors: Congenital Impairments, Infants, Cognitive Development, Mothers
Kim, Young-Suk – Journal of Research in Reading, 2008
This study investigated trajectories of Korean children's growth in the awareness of four phonological units--"syllable," "body," "rime" and "phoneme"--over time, by following a sample of 215 children over a period of 15 months, beginning at their first year of preschool and collecting four waves of data. Much of the existing research suggests…
Descriptors: Phonological Awareness, Rhyme, Korean, Emergent Literacy
Antshel, Kevin M.; Nastasi, Robert – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2008
An aspect of metacognition, metamemory (knowledge and awareness of one's memory) was investigated across time in preschool children with ADHD (n = 31) and a sample of age, sex, socioeconomic and IQ-matched typically developing children (n = 31). Only children with stable ADHD diagnoses were included. Participants were assessed on a variety of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Attention Deficit Disorders, Preschool Children, Metacognition

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