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Tongyan Ren; Xuechen Ding; Chen Cheng – Developmental Science, 2025
Working memory (WM) is a critical cognitive system that supports processing a variety of information. Remembering different types of objects may impose different levels of cognitive demands on WM performance. In the present study, we examined 205 children's WM in representing different types of content and its developmental trajectories in early…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Schemata (Cognition), Preschool Children, Concept Formation
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Rosie Aboody; Julianna Lu; Stephanie Denison; Julian Jara-Ettinger – Child Development, 2025
When determining what others know, we intuitively consider not only whether they succeed but also their probability of success in the absence of knowledge (e.g., random guessing). Across three experiments (n = 240 North American 4-6-year-olds, data collected between 2020-2023) we find that 4-year-olds understand that tasks with a lower probability…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Age Differences, Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning
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Samuel Ronfard; Brandon W. Goulding; Jonathan D. Lane – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Unlike adults, young children think that many weird and unlikely events are impossible. Existing theories have argued that this developmental shift is driven primarily by age-related changes in knowledge as well as an increasing ability to reflect on one's modal intuitions. However, this intuition + reflection model fails to explain…
Descriptors: Young Children, Childrens Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Holly A. White; Lauren Highfill; Lily C. Johnston; Aravinda Kalimi – Teaching of Psychology, 2024
Background: Attentiveness during class is critical for learning. Teachers have strategies to promote active engagement and active learning, yet little control over students' baseline level of alertness and focus upon arriving to class. Objective: To evaluate the effect of pre-lecture cognitive exercise on attention and learning in lectures.…
Descriptors: Attention, Lecture Method, Program Effectiveness, Cognitive Development
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Denis Dumas; Boris Forthmann; Patricia Alexander – Educational Psychologist, 2024
Creative thinking is a process through which individuals generate ideas that are simultaneously novel and meaningful within a given social context. Historically, psychologists have closely studied the general creative capacity of young learners, as well as the domain-specific creativity of experts. However, the developmental trajectory from…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creativity, Creative Development, Expertise
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Deirdre Barry; Jacob Neufeld; Ian Stewart – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2024
According to relational frame theory (RFT), temporal relational responding is key to important repertoires, including sequencing, ordering, planning, and time understanding. Previous studies have taught several other varieties of relational responding (e.g., comparison, deictics) but relatively little work has been done in the case of temporal…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Adolescents, Responses, Time
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Maximilian Seitz; Manja Attig; Dave Möwisch; Markus Vogelbacher; Sabine Weinert – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2025
Studies on the emergence of effects of socioeconomic inequality typically report that socioeconomic background is positively associated with early cognitive abilities. However, studies on looking behaviour in habituation tasks rarely investigate this association, although such tasks are standard in measuring cognitive abilities in infants. The…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Socioeconomic Background, Habituation, Eye Movements
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Gaia Scerif; Jelena Sucevic; Hannah Andrews; Emma Blakey; Sylvia U. Gattas; Amy Godfrey; Zachary Hawes; Steven J. Howard; Liberty Kent; Rebecca Merkley; Rosemary O'Connor; Fionnuala O'Reilly; Victoria Simms – npj Science of Learning, 2025
Executive functions (EF) are crucial to regulating learning and are predictors of emerging mathematics. However, interventions that leverage EF to improve mathematics remain poorly understood. 193 four-year-olds (mean age = 3 years; 11 months pre-intervention; 111 female, 69% White) were assessed 5 months apart, with 103 children randomised to an…
Descriptors: Numeracy, Executive Function, Mathematics Skills, Preschool Children
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Caterina Pesce; Emiliano Mazzoli; Clarice Martins; David Stodden – Journal of Motor Learning and Development, 2025
The purpose of this position paper is to raise awareness of intriguing interdisciplinary intersections among physical activity, motor learning/development, creativity, and cognition. A major intersection is the potential of physical activity that involves the effortful learning of novel and/or complex movement actions to elicit cognitive…
Descriptors: Motor Development, Physical Activity Level, Creativity, Learning
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Marie Sophie Hunze; Franziska Freudenberger; Yvonne Gerigk; Peter Ohler; Gerhild Nieding – Journal of Children and Media, 2025
Evidence shows that the first component of media literacy to develop in children is media sign literacy (MSL), an ability that focuses on the understanding and correct use of the signs and symbol systems that organize different media. Previous research has shown that MSL is a significant predictor of learning from media. In this study, we…
Descriptors: Educational Media, Preschool Children, Films, Audio Books
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Lucy A. Lurie; Meredith A. Gruhn; Kathryn Garrisi; Katie A. McLaughlin; Kathryn L. Humphreys; Charles H. Zeanah; Nathan A. Fox; Charles A. Nelson; Margaret A. Sheridan – Developmental Science, 2025
Severe psychosocial deprivation in early childhood experienced by institutionally reared children changes the course of structural brain development. Evidence from the Bucharest Early Intervention Project (BEIP) has demonstrated a causal association of random assignment to high-quality foster care intervention in early childhood with remediation…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Early Experience, Foster Care, Adolescents
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Katrina Ferrara; Anna Seydell-Greenwald; Catherine E. Chambers; Elissa L. Newport; Barbara Landau – Developmental Science, 2025
Studies of hemispheric specialization have traditionally cast the left hemisphere as specialized for language and the right hemisphere for spatial function. Much of the supporting evidence for this separation of function comes from studies of healthy adults and those who have sustained lesions to the right or left hemisphere. However, we know…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Specialization, Language Aptitude
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Mopreet Pabla; Andrew Shtulman; Ori Friedman – Developmental Science, 2025
Children often say that possible events are impossible, and only gradually come to see these events as possible. For instance, they often deny that people could do unusual things, like own a pet peacock, or immoral things, like stealing or lying. These possibility denials are surprising. For instance, children have first-hand experience with the…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Evaluative Thinking, Probability, Realism
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Esteban Gómez-Muzzio; Katherine Strasser – Social Development, 2025
Conversational turns are an important predictor of cognitive and language development, but little is known about their relationship with socioemotional development. In a previous study using LENA technology, Gómez and Strasser (2021) found that conversational turns assessed with 43 infants at 18 months predicted socioemotional competencies at 30…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Interaction, Social Development, Emotional Development
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Qianqian Wan; Olivera Savic; Mengcun Gao; Robby Ralston; Allison P. O'Leary; Vladimir M. Sloutsky – Child Development, 2025
This longitudinal study investigates metacognitive development in children aged four to six (N = 148; 74 girls; 106 White, 21 multiracial, 17 Black, 3 Asian, 1 Latino; collected in 2017-2019) compared to adults (N = 26, 13 women; collected in 2022). We assessed metacognitive monitoring and control using experimenter-elicited and self-generated…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Cognitive Development, Child Development, Preschool Children
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