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Couzens, Donna; Haynes, Michele; Cuskelly, Monica – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2012
Background: Associations among cognitive development and intrapersonal and environmental characteristics were investigated for 89 longitudinal study participants with Down syndrome to understand developmental patterns associated with cognitive strengths and weaknesses. Materials and Methods: Subtest scores of the Stanford-Binet IV collected…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Predictor Variables, Educational Experience, Cognitive Development
Marusic, Mirko; Slisko, Josip – International Journal of Science Education, 2012
The Lawson Classroom Test of Scientific Reasoning (LCTSR) was used to gauge the relative effectiveness of three different methods of pedagogy, "Reading, Presenting, and Questioning" (RPQ), "Experimenting and Discussion" (ED), and "Traditional Methods" (TM), on increasing students' level of scientific thinking. The…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Development, Science Instruction, Physics
Baker, Chris L.; Saxe, Rebecca; Tenenbaum, Joshua B. – Cognition, 2009
Humans are adept at inferring the mental states underlying other agents' actions, such as goals, beliefs, desires, emotions and other thoughts. We propose a computational framework based on Bayesian inverse planning for modeling human action understanding. The framework represents an intuitive theory of intentional agents' behavior based on the…
Descriptors: Inferences, Cognitive Development, Models, Computation
Flint, Kevin J. – Educational Review, 2009
The institutional machine of contemporary activity theory currently appears to be constrained by centring on the structure of mediated activity first voiced by Vygotsky. As a centring, such a principle, it is argued, continually restores the equilibrium of the institutional machine in alignment with its possible development in the polysemy of…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Young Children, Child Development, Learning Theories
Poulin-Dubois, Diane; Chow, Virginia – Developmental Psychology, 2009
We investigated whether 16-month-old infants' past experience with a person's gaze reliability influences their expectation about the person's ability to form beliefs. Infants were first administered a search task in which they observed an experimenter show excitement while looking inside a box that either contained a toy (reliable looker…
Descriptors: Infants, Toys, Social Cognition, Cognitive Development
Sommerville, Jessica A.; Crane, Catharyn C. – Developmental Science, 2009
For adults, prior information about an individual's likely goals, preferences or dispositions plays a powerful role in interpreting ambiguous behavior and predicting and interpreting behavior in novel contexts. Across two studies, we investigated whether 10-month-old infants' ability to identify the goal of an ambiguous action sequence was…
Descriptors: Infants, Objectives, Behavior, Prediction
Sobel, David M.; Buchanan, David W. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Previous research has shown that preschoolers extend labels and internal properties of objects based on those objects' causal properties, even when the causal properties conflict with the objects' perceptual appearance [Nazzi, T., & Gopnik, A. (2000). "A shift in children's use of perceptual and causal cues to categorization." "Developmental…
Descriptors: Cues, Conflict, Preschool Children, Classification
Amin, Tamer G. – Human Development, 2009
This paper argues that the metaphorical representation of concepts and the appropriation of language-based construals can be hypothesized as additional sources of conceptual change alongside those previously proposed. Analyses of construals implicit in the lay and scientific use of the noun "energy" from the perspective of the theory of conceptual…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Energy, Epistemology, Concept Formation
Hollingworth, Andrew; Franconeri, Steven L. – Cognition, 2009
The "correspondence problem" is a classic issue in vision and cognition. Frequent perceptual disruptions, such as saccades and brief occlusion, create gaps in perceptual input. How does the visual system establish correspondence between objects visible before and after the disruption? Current theories hold that object correspondence is established…
Descriptors: Cues, Cognitive Development, Spatial Ability, Correlation
Scott-Phillips, Thomas C.; Kirby, Simon; Ritchie, Graham R. S. – Cognition, 2009
A unique hallmark of human language is that it uses signals that are both learnt and symbolic. The emergence of such signals was therefore a defining event in human cognitive evolution, yet very little is known about how such a process occurs. Previous work provides some insights on how meaning can become attached to form, but a more foundational…
Descriptors: Experiments, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Games
Arthur, Andrea E.; Bigler, Rebecca S.; Ruble, Diane N. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
This study provides an experimental test of the hypothesis that level of gender constancy understanding affects children's sex typing. Preschool-age children (N = 62, mean age = 47 months) were randomly assigned to experimental lessons that taught that biological traits (including gender) are either fixed (pro-constancy condition) or mutable…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Sex Stereotypes, Sexual Identity, Cognitive Development
Aureli, Tiziana; Perucchini, Paola; Genco, Maria – Cognitive Development, 2009
Two tasks were administered to 40 children aged from 16 to 20 months (mean age = 18;1), to evaluate children's understanding of declarative and informative intention [Behne, T., Carpenter, M., & Tomasello, M. (2005). One-year-olds comprehend the communicative intentions behind gestures in a hiding game. "Developmental Science", 8, 492-499;…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Nonverbal Communication, Intention, Cognitive Ability
Sobel, David M.; Sommerville, Jessica A. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Shown commensurate actions and information by an adult, preschoolers' causal learning was influenced by the pedagogical context in which these actions occurred. Four-year-olds who were provided with a reason for an experimenter's action relevant to learning causal structure showed more accurate causal learning than children exposed to the same…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Learning Processes, Cognitive Development, Child Development
Meunier, Benjamin; Cordier, Francoise – Cognitive Development, 2009
The present study investigated the role of the causal status of features and feature type in biological categorizations by young children. Study 1 showed that 5-year-olds are more strongly influenced by causal features than effect features; 4-year-olds exhibit no such tendency. There therefore appears to be a conceptual change between the ages of…
Descriptors: Classification, Biology, Developmental Stages, Young Children
Demetriou, Andreas; Bakracevic, Karin – Learning and Individual Differences, 2009
This study involved four age groups: 13-15-, 23-25-, 33-35-, and 43-45-yr-olds. All adult groups involved persons with university education and persons with low education. Participants (1) solved tasks addressed to spatial, propositional, and social reasoning, (2) evaluated their own performance and the difficulty of the tasks, and (3) answered an…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Adolescents, Adults, Self Concept

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