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Showing 7,831 to 7,845 of 10,074 results
Peer reviewedPennington, Bruce F.; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Four experiments with familial and clinical dyslexics aimed at defining primary processing deficits in adult dyslexia. Processes studied included phoneme perception and awareness, lexical retrieval, articulatory speed, and short-term memory. Only phoneme awareness met the criteria for primary deficit. Clinical dyslexics exhibited short-term memory…
Descriptors: Adults, Articulation (Speech), Dyslexia, Encoding (Psychology)
Peer reviewedPearson, Deborah A.; Lane, David M. – Child Development, 1990
Children of 8 and 11 years and college students were tested for reorientation of visual attention to a target following a cue. The first, but not the second, experiment showed an interaction between distance of target from fixation and stimulus onset asynchrony. The second experiment suggested children can orient attention through valid, neutral,…
Descriptors: Children, College Students, Cues, Developmental Continuity
Peer reviewedPerris, Eve Emmanuel; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Children's memory of single infant experience was evaluated. At 6.5 months, infants participated in study of reaching in light and dark for sounding object. Children repeated dark procedure in laboratory when they were either one year or two years older. Older children with infant experience reached and grasped the sounding object significantly…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Cues, Early Experience, Encoding (Psychology)
Peer reviewedAu, Terry Kit-fong; Laframboise, Denise E. – Child Development, 1990
Examined the effect of linguistic contrast in children's learning of color names. A novel color term for a stimulus color that was contrasted with a child's label helped five-year olds learn the new term. When the contrast was presented more than once, three- and four-year olds performed much like the five-year olds. (BC)
Descriptors: Color, Error Correction, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
Peer reviewedCapelli, Carol A.; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Two experiments compared the abilities of third and sixth graders and adults to recognize sarcasm given context and intonation cues. Children recognized sarcasm only when given a speaker's sarcastic intonation cue, even when context strongly indicated a nonliteral interpretation. (BC)
Descriptors: Adults, Cues, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedLovett, Suzanne B.; Flavell, John H. – Child Development, 1990
Assessed first and third graders' and undergraduates' knowledge of strategies appropriate to comprehension and memory. Also assessed their knowledge of task variables affecting comprehension and memorization tasks. Only undergraduates showed understanding of comprehension-memory distinction. Third graders showed some understanding of differential…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Comprehension
Peer reviewedGoodman, Gail S.; Aman, Christine – Child Development, 1990
Three- and five-year olds were tested for recall with anatomically detailed dolls and regular dolls. Subjects were tested with and without visual cues. Anatomically detailed dolls did not foster false reports of abuse. Findings have implications for children's testimony in child abuse cases. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Abuse, Cues, Recall (Psychology)
Peer reviewedRussell, James A. – Child Development, 1990
Preschoolers completed stories about fear, anger, sadness, happiness, and surprise by explaining why a protagonist felt a particular emotion or what the protagonist did when he felt the emotion. Children distinguished causes from consequences for most emotions. Accuracy was not increased when an emotion was specified by a facial expression rather…
Descriptors: Anger, Attribution Theory, Facial Expressions, Fear
Peer reviewedSkinner, Ellen A. – Child Development, 1990
Assessed children's beliefs about the effectiveness of five causes of school success. At the age of 7-8 years, children differentiated the factors into "unknown" and "other"; at 9-10, "other" was differentiated into "internal" and "external"; at 11-12, "internal" was differentiated into "effort" and "ability." Thus, causal beliefs became more…
Descriptors: Ability, Academic Achievement, Age Differences, Attribution Theory
Peer reviewedMartin, Carol Lynn; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Children of 4 to 10 years of age were told about children whose sex was not specified and who had a masculine or feminine toy or characteristic. Results indicated that children first learn characteristics relevant to their own sex, and that older children's stereotypic judgments about gender are more extreme than those of younger children. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Femininity, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedGalambos, Nancy L.; And Others – Child Development, 1990
Assessed differences in masculinity, femininity, and sex role attitudes in adolescent girls and boys, and the relation of pubertal timing to intensification of those attitudes. Found that sex differences in masculinity and sex role attitudes increased with age. Pubertal timing was unrelated to masculinity, femininity, and sex role attitudes. (BC)
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Age Differences
Peer reviewedWeisner, Thomas S.; Wilson-Mitchell, Jane E. – Child Development, 1990
Examined sex role socialization and sex-typing in six-year olds from conventional and nonconventional family types. Children from families with strongest sex egalitarian beliefs displayed non-sex-typed knowledge of objects and occupations more often than did children from other families. Across family types, girls had more flexible sex-typing…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Family Characteristics, Family Influence, Family Life
Peer reviewedKochanska, Grazyna – Child Development, 1990
Two kinds of parental beliefs, endorsed rearing philosophy (authoritative-authoritarian dimension) and affective attitude toward child (positive-negative affect dimension), were examined in 20 normal and 36 depressed mothers as long-term predictors of child rearing behaviors and interaction patterns with their children. (BC)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Child Rearing, Depression (Psychology), Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedGoldsmith, H. Hill; Campos, Joseph J. – Child Development, 1990
Temperament of nine-month olds was assessed by means of questionnaires and two laboratory visits. Mothers' and fathers' agreement on questionnaire scales was low, and their factor structures differed. In laboratory measures, fearfulness and pleasure showed cross-situation generality, short-term stability, and convergence with questionnaire scales.…
Descriptors: Fathers, Fear, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedVaughn, Brian E.; Waters, Everett – Child Development, 1990
Infants' home-based Q-sort scores of security, dependency, and sociability were compared to laboratory Strange Situation classifications of secure, anxious-resistant, and anxious-avoidant. Secure classification was associated with Q-sort security and sociability, but not dependency. (BC)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Attachment Behavior, Dependency (Personality), Exploratory Behavior


