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Showing 7,756 to 7,770 of 10,074 results
Peer reviewedBigler, Rebecca S.; Liben, Lynn S. – Child Development, 1992
Children who had received training in sorting pictures of men and women, and in sorting occupations according to rules that countered gender stereotypes, exhibited a more egalitarian response in subsequent measures of gender stereotyping and showed superior memory for counterstereotypic information in stories than did other children. (BC)
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Memory, Occupations
Peer reviewedTudge, Jonathan R. H. – Child Development, 1992
Children were tested to discover their rules for predicting the movement of a balance beam. The children worked with a partner who used the same rule or a rule evidencing more or less competence. Rules discovered in posttests were equally likely to show advances or declines in competence from pretest rules. (BC)
Descriptors: Children, Competence, Cooperation, Peer Influence
Peer reviewedWagner, Barry M.; Phillips, Deborah A. – Child Development, 1992
Third graders with high achievement levels were observed while they worked with their parents on solvable and unsolvable problems. The children's perceptions of their academic competence were related to the father's warmth during the work on the problems and to the child's type of behavior while working on unsolvable problems. (BC)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary School Students, Fathers, High Achievement
Peer reviewedKnight, George P.; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Results indicated that the Family Adaptability and Cohesion Scales II, one subscale of the Parent-Adolescent Communication Scale, and all but one subscale of the Children's Report of Parental Behavior Inventory produced equivalent measures of an English-speaking Hispanic sample and an Anglo-American sample. (BC)
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Child Rearing, Children, Construct Validity
Peer reviewedClingempeel, W. Glenn; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Children, mothers, and mothers' parents completed questionnaires about the children's involvement with their grandparents. Grandparents were more involved with grandchildren from single-parent than from two-parent families. As grandchildren's pubertal development progressed, grandparents became more involved with grandsons, and grandfathers became…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family Relationship, Family Structure, Grandparents
Peer reviewedHayes, Donald S.; Casey, Dina M. – Child Development, 1992
Six experiments measured preschoolers' ability to remember the affective reactions of characters in television shows. In two experiments, less than 1 percent of characters' reactions were recalled. In three experiments, children accurately recognized labels for reactions immediately after their portrayal but showed reductions in recognition memory…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Childrens Television, Preschool Children, Short Term Memory
Peer reviewedEmde, Robert N.; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Assessments of temperament, emotion, cognition, and language acquisition were obtained for 200 pairs of 14-month-old twins. Comparisons between the assessment correlations for identical and fraternal twins indicated an influence of genetics on inhibition, activity, temperament, empathy, negative emotion, spatial memory, categorization skills, and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Emotional Development, Genetics, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedCalkins, Susan D.; Fox, Nathan A. – Child Development, 1992
Assessed infant temperament at 2 days and 5 months of age, attachment to mother at 14 months, and behavioral inhibition at 24 months. Distress at pacifier withdrawal at two days was related to insecure attachment. Reactivity to frustration and novelty at five months was related to high vagal tone. Attachment classification was related to inhibited…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Heart Rate, Infants, Inhibition
Peer reviewedDozier, Mary; Kobak, R. Rogers – Child Development, 1992
Monitored skin conductance of college students while they recalled experiences of separation, rejection, and threat from parents. Students who diverted attention from attachment information to deal with attachment-related issues showed increases in skin conductance levels from baseline. (BC)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, College Students, Inhibition, Parent Child Relationship
Peer reviewedSpiker, Donna; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Mothers, teachers, and assistant teachers completed two measures of child behavior when children born prematurely were two and three years old. Interinstrument correlations for total scores, and the stability of the Behavior Check List from two to three years, were moderate. Interrater agreements between teachers and assistant teachers were…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Birth Weight, Interrater Reliability, Mothers
Peer reviewedKisilevsky, Barbara S.; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Fetuses received vibroacoustic stimulation while movement and heart rate were monitored. From 29 weeks, at least 83 percent of fetuses responded to stimulation with heart rate acceleration. Between 26 and 36 weeks, the percentage of fetuses responding to stimulation with movement increased from 58 to 100 percent. (BC)
Descriptors: Heart Rate, Longitudinal Studies, Responses
Peer reviewedStack, Dale M.; Muir, Darwin W. – Child Development, 1992
Three studies examined infants' responses to tactile stimulation by adults who offered neutral facial expressions to the infants. Results implied that adult touch and facial expressions act as modulators of infant affect and attention in social exchanges. (BC)
Descriptors: Adult Child Relationship, Attention, Facial Expressions, Infant Behavior
Developmental Change in Infant Categorization: The Perception of Correlations among Facial Features.
Peer reviewedYounger, Barbara – Child Development, 1992
Tested 7 and 10 month olds for perception of correlations among facial features. After habituation to faces displaying a pattern of correlation, 10 month olds generalized to a novel face that preserved the pattern of correlation but showed increased attention to a novel face that violated the pattern. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Infants, Perceptual Development
Peer reviewedKalish, Charles W.; Gelman, Susan A. – Child Development, 1992
In one of three studies, preschoolers judged that items that shared material properties, such as metal composition, would share dispositional properties, such as corrodibility in water, and that items of the same object type, such as baseball bats, would share functional properties, such as the ability to accelerate a baseball. (BC)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Induction, Young Children
Peer reviewedMoore, Colleen F.; And Others – Child Development, 1991
Examined the development of proportional reasoning by means of a temperature mixture task. Results show the importance of distinguishing between intuitive knowledge and formal computational knowledge of proportional concepts. Provides a new perspective on the relation of intuitive and computational knowledge during development. (GLR)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, College Students, Computation


