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Love, Patrick G. – Journal of College Student Development, 2002
Three spiritual development theories and theorists (i.e., Parks, Fowler, and Helminiak) were compared with traditional cognitive development theory and theorists. The analysis reveals both commonalities between the two sets of theories and unique contributions to an understanding of student development on the part of spiritual development theory.…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Spirituality
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Kinchin, Ian M. – School Science Review, 2000
Finds that the construction of concept maps may help students make links between scientific concepts and related topic areas. Describes different methods of concept map analysis which illustrate different levels of conceptual development. (CCM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Concept Mapping, Science Education
Begley, Sharon – Newsweek, 1997
Explores how experiences after birth exert a dramatic and precise impact, physically determining how the intricate neural circuits of the brain are wired, in particular, in areas of language and vocabulary. Discusses the brain's acute vulnerability to trauma such as under or over stimulation or abuse. (HTH)
Descriptors: Brain, Child Neglect, Cognitive Development, Early Experience
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Nichols, Shaun; Stich, Stephen – Cognition, 2000
Presents a theory of pretense in which pretense representations are contained in a separate mental workspace, a Possible World Box, part of the basic architecture of the human mind with several similarities to beliefs. Maintains that pretend play is motivated from a desire to act in a way that fits the description being constructed in the Possible…
Descriptors: Adults, Beliefs, Children, Cognitive Development
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Lie, Eunhui; Newcombe, Nora S. – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Examined elementary school children's memories for faces of preschool classmates after a three-year interval. Found that children recognized their classmates at an above-chance level but significantly below that of the preschool teachers. The classmate advantage on the face-matching task decreased across the three-year interval. Findings suggest…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Memory
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Quinn, Paul C.; Eimas, Peter D.; Tarr, Michael – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Four experiments utilizing the familiarization-novelty preference procedure examined whether 3- and 4-month-olds could form categorical representations for cats versus dogs from the perceptual information available in silhouettes. Findings indicated that general shape or external contour information centered about the head was sufficient for…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants
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Ruffman, Ted; Garnham, Wendy; Import, Arlina; Connolly, Dan – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
Examined whether correct eye gaze in a false belief task among 3- to 5-year-olds indexed unconscious knowledge or low confidence conscious knowledge. Found that children "bet" very highly on the location consistent with their explicit answer. Result was supported by a number of conditions that showed that betting was a sensitive measure…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Eye Movements, Knowledge Level, Performance Factors
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Notaro, Paul C.; Gelman, Susan A.; Zimmerman, Marc A. – Child Development, 2001
Two studies compared how preschoolers through fifth graders and adults reasoned about psychogenic bodily reactions such as stress-induced headaches. Results supported a developmental path: younger children view psychogenic bodily responses as wholly physical, but with age, view them as both physical and psychological. (Author/KB)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Beliefs, Children
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Carver, Leslie J. – Infant and Child Development, 2006
Jones and Herbert describe research on deferred imitation and how this research reflects on the development of explicit memory in infancy. The article raises several interesting questions about how the medial temporal lobe memory system develops. In this commentary, I discuss some of the additional theoretical and empirical questions that are…
Descriptors: Infants, Imitation, Individual Differences, Generalization
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Ruffman, Ted; Slade, Lance; Redman, Jessica – Cognition, 2005
Infants aged 3-5 months (mean of approximately 4 months) were given a novel anticipatory looking task to test object permanence understanding. They were trained to expect an experimenter to retrieve an object from behind a transparent screen upon hearing a cue (''Doors up, here comes the hand''). The experimenter then hid the object behind one of…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Infants, Object Permanence, Stimulation
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Cassidy, Kimberly Wright; Fineberg, Deborah Shaw; Brown, Kimberly; Perkins, Alexis – Child Development, 2005
The theory-of-mind abilities of twins, children with nontwin siblings, and only children were compared to investigate further the link between number and type of siblings and theory-of-mind abilities. Three- to 5-year-old children with nontwin siblings outperformed both only children and twins with no other siblings, twins who also had other…
Descriptors: Twins, Cognitive Development, Siblings, Comparative Analysis
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Bedford, Felice L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
It has become increasingly common for theories to rely on a constraint that 1 object cannot be in more than 1 place at the same time. Analysis suggests that a 1 object--1 place--1 time constraint as literally stated is false, that a modified constraint is biased toward the visual modality, that it may not be a correct description of the physical…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Visual Perception, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes
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Flavell, John H. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This review begins with a brief history from Piagetian perspective-taking development, through metacognitive development, and into the past and present field of theory-of-mind development. This field has included research on what infants and children know about a variety of mental states, on possible causes and consequences of mentalistic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Child Development, Individual Differences, Theories
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van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H.; Juffer, Femmie; Poelhuis, Caroline W. Klein – Psychological Bulletin, 2005
This meta-analysis of 62 studies (N=17,767 adopted children) examined whether the cognitive development of adopted children differed from that of (a) children who remained in institutional care or in the birth family and (b) their current (environmental) nonadopted siblings or peers. Adopted children scored higher on IQ tests than their nonadopted…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Siblings, Intelligence Quotient, Cognitive Development
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Sharon, Tanya; Woolley, Jacqueline D. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Young children are often thought to confuse fantasy and reality. This study took a second look at preschoolers' fantasy/reality differentiation. We employed a new measure of fantasy/reality differentiation--a property attribution task--in which children were questioned regarding the properties of both real and fantastical entities. We also…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Fantasy, Attribution Theory, Task Analysis
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