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Rudegeair, Robert E. – 1970
Acoustic studies have shown that phonetic context can have substantial effects on the cues associated with a given speech sound. The present study investigates whether or not modifications in the acoustic correlates of initial stops and fricatives due to the following vowel can affect phonemic decision processes. In the first of two experiments,…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Auditory Discrimination, Child Language, Cognitive Development
Fletcher, Harold J.; Garske, John P. – 1968
Ten kindergarten and 46 first grade children were given two-choice object discrimination problems, during which a prompt indicated the positive (rewarded) object, P. Guided by the prompt, all Ss subjects displaced P and therefore observed only its reward value; no direct observation was made of the reward value of the negative (nonrewarded)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Deduction, Discrimination Learning, Grade 1
Webb, Roger A.; And Others – 1973
Young children were studied in tasks that required them to select one object as "different" from another. Children systematically selected maximally similar objects until about 3 years of age, and thereafter performed correctly. Additional data derived from the children's verbal justifications and refusals to select suggested a 4-stage model in…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Learning Processes
Hunt, Dennis; And Others – 1974
Sixty-four 8-year-old children were divided into fast and slow learner groups and trained on a tactile simultaneous discrimination task. Selective attention was measured in terms of percentage contact time per trial to the relevant dimension. Inter- and intracouplings per trial were also recorded. A multivariate analysis was carried out to examine…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Discrimination Learning, Exceptional Child Research
Riegel, Klaus F. – 1973
Arguments for an extension of Piaget's theory of cognitive development have been derived from philosophical and historical considerations of modern natural science. Implicit contradictions, which characterize these sciences as well as common thought, can be systematically apprehended only through a dialectic reinterpretation. The dialectic basis…
Descriptors: Adults, Age, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology
Miller, Patricia H.; And Others – 1972
Two studies examined how nonconservers use the dimensions relevant to quantity in the conservation of substance task. Most nonconservers are very selective in their use of the information provided by these dimensions. Most preschool and kindergarten nonconservers used length to define amount, while ignoring width. This was true regardless of how…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Conservation (Concept), Dimensional Preference
Riley, Christine A.; Trabasso, Tom – 1973
This study is based on an earlier investigation by Brant and Trabasso, in which it was demonstrated that 4-year-old children could perform transitive inferences when training forced information encoding by involving questions about two comparative dimensions of an object (long and short). The present study was designed to examine the sources of…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Development, Feedback, Information Processing
Winkelstein, Ellen; Wolfson, Gail – 1971
The objective of this study was to provide intensive, consistent experience in the following developmental areas: relation to objects and vocal and gestural imitation. The curriculum was developed in an inner city industry-based day care center with 14 infants aged 8 to 19 months initially. The Hunt-Uzgiris Scales measuring development in these…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development, Day Care, Infant Behavior
Wargo, Michael J.; And Others – 1971
This study was the third in a series, and its primary objective was the identification and description of successful compensatory educational programs for disadvantaged children. Programs were considered successful if they demonstrated cognitive benefits that were statistically and educationally significant. The second objective of this study was…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Disadvantaged Youth
Curtice, Edith – 1971
This study considers recent research in human development and behavior, synthesizes commonalities across the research sources, and draws implications for art education in the classroom from kindergarten through grade 12. The research findings in cognitive development of Jean Piaget and Jerome Bruner are examined, together with other sources…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Cognitive Development, Cultural Enrichment
Frayer, Dorothy A.; Klausmeier, Herbert J. – 1972
Research has shown that a behavior may be acquired through observing and imitating a model. A behavior which has already been acquired may be inhibited, disinhibited, or elicited by observing and imitating. A definition of imitation is given, and the effects of imitation on learning and performance are summarized. Research on factors which affect…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Imitation, Learning, Learning Activities
PDF pending restorationShultz, Thomas R. – 1973
The theory of a number of philosophers and psychologists, including Freud, is that humor is a biphasic sequence involving first the discovery of incongruity and then the resolution of the incongruity. Without the mechanism of resolution, we cannot distinguish humor from nonsense. The punch line of a joke is seemingly incongruous with the preceding…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Lewis, William Roedolph – 1972
School size, age and sex of students as related to scores on the six Piagetian Developmental Thought Processes Tasks were investigated. Five hundred seventy-four students from seventh through twelfth grades were randomly selected from 25 different schools classified as small, medium, or large. Data were treated through factorial analysis of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Tasks, Doctoral Dissertations
MUKTARIAN, HERBERT H.; THOMPSON, GEORGE G. – 1966
PIAGET'S THEORETICAL FORMULATION OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF CONSERVATION OF CONTINUOUS QUANTITY WAS EXAMINED. CONTROL SUBJECTS IN EACH OF TWO AGE GROUPS (5 AND 6 YEARS) WERE GIVEN A COMPLEX TASK SITUATION THAT IS TYPICAL OF PIAGET'S WORK. THESE SUBJECTS WERE ALSO GIVEN ANOTHER TASK, A MEASURE OF CONSERVATION OF QUANTITY THAT IS INDEPENDENT OF PIAGET'S…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching, Mathematical Concepts
Malone, Abrian McCoy – 1975
It was hypothesized that middle-grade elementary school students' cognitive development, as defined by Jean Piaget, is positively related to reading ability, when the effects of sex, age, grade level, and language ability are held constant. A stratified, random sample of 138 sixth and seventh graders was administered a test based on Piagetian…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Doctoral Dissertations, Elementary Secondary Education, Reading Ability


