Publication Date
| In 2015 | 3 |
| Since 2014 | 13 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 55 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 103 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 113 |
Descriptor
| Elementary School Students | 64 |
| Children | 35 |
| Foreign Countries | 32 |
| Age Differences | 31 |
| Cognitive Processes | 25 |
| Task Analysis | 19 |
| Cognitive Development | 18 |
| Grade 1 | 16 |
| Adults | 14 |
| Correlation | 14 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
| Journal of Cognition and… | 43 |
| Cognition and Instruction | 33 |
| Cognition | 19 |
| Bilingualism: Language and… | 7 |
| Brain and Cognition | 5 |
| Journal of Experimental… | 5 |
| Instructional Science: An… | 1 |
Author
| Verschaffel, Lieven | 5 |
| Alibali, Martha W. | 4 |
| Spelke, Elizabeth S. | 3 |
| Vasilyeva, Marina | 3 |
| Callanan, Maureen A. | 2 |
| Casey, Beth M. | 2 |
| Diesendruck, Gil | 2 |
| Ding, Meixia | 2 |
| Earnest, Darrell | 2 |
| Ganley, Colleen M. | 2 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 113 |
| Reports - Research | 93 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 16 |
| Reports - Descriptive | 4 |
| Tests/Questionnaires | 2 |
Education Level
| Elementary Education | 113 |
| Grade 3 | 22 |
| Grade 2 | 21 |
| Grade 1 | 20 |
| Grade 4 | 16 |
| Grade 5 | 15 |
| Primary Education | 13 |
| Early Childhood Education | 12 |
| Higher Education | 10 |
| Grade 6 | 9 |
| More ▼ | |
Audience
| Researchers | 1 |
| Teachers | 1 |
Showing 1 to 15 of 113 results
Piantadosi, Steven T.; Tenenbaum, Joshua B.; Goodman, Noah D. – Cognition, 2012
In acquiring number words, children exhibit a qualitative leap in which they transition from understanding a few number words, to possessing a rich system of interrelated numerical concepts. We present a computational framework for understanding this inductive leap as the consequence of statistical inference over a sufficiently powerful…
Descriptors: Statistical Inference, Number Concepts, Models, Computation
Grainger, Jonathan; Lete, Bernard; Bertand, Daisy; Dufau, Stephane; Ziegler, Johannes C. – Cognition, 2012
We describe a multiple-route model of reading development in which coarse-grained orthographic processing plays a key role in optimizing access to semantics via whole-word orthographic representations. This forms part of the direct orthographic route that gradually replaces phonological recoding during the initial phases of reading acquisition.…
Descriptors: Evidence, Reading Difficulties, Reading, Semantics
Berteletti, Ilaria; Lucangeli, Daniela; Zorzi, Marco – Cognition, 2012
The representation of numerical and non-numerical ordered sequences was investigated in children from preschool to grade 3. The child's conception of how sequence items map onto a spatial scale was tested using the Number-to-Position task (Siegler & Opfer, 2003) and new variants of the task designed to probe the representation of the alphabet…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Investigations, Preschool Education, Task Analysis
Deacon, S. Helene; Benere, Jenna; Castles, Anne – Cognition, 2012
There is increasing evidence of a relationship between orthographic processing skill, or the ability to form, store and access word representations, and reading ability. Empirical research to date has not, however, clarified the direction of this relationship. We examined this question in a three-year longitudinal study of children from Grades 1…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Orthographic Symbols, Accuracy, Reading Ability
Rowland, Caroline F.; Chang, Franklin; Ambridge, Ben; Pine, Julian M.; Lieven, Elena V. M. – Cognition, 2012
Structural priming paradigms have been influential in shaping theories of adult sentence processing and theories of syntactic development. However, until recently there have been few attempts to provide an integrated account that explains both adult and developmental data. The aim of the present paper was to begin the process of integration by…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Sentences, Verbs
Bugden, Stephanie; Ansari, Daniel – Cognition, 2011
In recent years, there has been an increasing focus on the role played by basic numerical magnitude processing in the typical and atypical development of mathematical skills. In this context, tasks measuring both the intentional and automatic processing of numerical magnitude have been employed to characterize how children's representation and…
Descriptors: Models, Mathematics Achievement, Elementary School Students, Individual Differences
Chen, Aleck Shih-Wei – Cognition, 2011
Two experiments examining the subsyllabic division behaviors of Chinese-speaking children learning English as a foreign language (EFL) are reported. In Experiment 1, target phonemes of monosyllabic English nonwords were varied in phonotactic context (e.g., (C)VC vs. (C)CVC), marginality (e.g., (C)CVC vs. C(C)VC), and/or position (e.g., (C)VC vs.…
Descriptors: Syllables, Children, English (Second Language), Phonemes
Gonzalez, Michel; Girotto, Vittorio – Cognition, 2011
Young children are able to judge which of two possibilities is more likely to occur when these possibilities are characterized by a simple property, like color ("Is it more likely to draw a red chip or a blue chip?"). Here we ask whether they can do so when the possibilities concern a relation between simple properties ("Is it more likely to draw…
Descriptors: Probability, Prediction, Young Children, Color
Beck, Sarah R.; Apperly, Ian A.; Chappell, Jackie; Guthrie, Carlie; Cutting, Nicola – Cognition, 2011
Tool making evidences intelligent, flexible thinking. In Experiment 1, we confirmed that 4- to 7-year-olds chose a hook tool to retrieve a bucket from a tube. In Experiment 2, 3- to 5-year-olds consistently failed to innovate a simple hook tool. Eight-year-olds performed at mature levels. In contrast, making a tool following demonstration was easy…
Descriptors: Experiments, Children, Thinking Skills, Age Differences
Haun, Daniel B. M.; Rapold, Christian J.; Janzen, Gabriele; Levinson, Stephen C. – Cognition, 2011
The present paper explores cross-cultural variation in spatial cognition by comparing spatial reconstruction tasks by Dutch and Namibian elementary school children. These two communities differ in the way they predominantly express spatial relations in language. Four experiments investigate cognitive strategy preferences across different levels of…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Language Usage, Contrastive Linguistics, Cultural Differences
Gilmore, Camilla K.; McCarthy, Shannon E.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2010
Children take years to learn symbolic arithmetic. Nevertheless, non-human animals, human adults with no formal education, and human infants represent approximate number in arrays of objects and sequences of events, and they use these capacities to perform approximate addition and subtraction. Do children harness these abilities when they begin to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Symbols (Mathematics), Kindergarten, Arithmetic
McCrink, Koleen; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2010
A dedicated, non-symbolic, system yielding imprecise representations of large quantities (approximate number system, or ANS) has been shown to support arithmetic calculations of addition and subtraction. In the present study, 5-7-year-old children without formal schooling in multiplication and division were given a task requiring a scalar…
Descriptors: Number Systems, Arithmetic, Multiplication, Young Children
Diesendruck, Gil; Haber, Lital – Cognition, 2009
Creationism implies that God imbued each category with a unique nature and purpose. These implications closely correspond to what some cognitive psychologists define as an essentialistic and teleological stance towards categories. This study assessed to what extent the belief in God as creator of categories is related to the mappings of these…
Descriptors: Animals, Jews, Psychologists, Preschool Children
Kandel, Sonia; Herault, Lucie; Grosjacques, Geraldine; Lambert, Eric; Fayol, Michel – Cognition, 2009
French children program the words they write syllable by syllable. We examined whether the syllable the children use to segment words is determined phonologically (i.e., is derived from speech production processes) or orthographically. Third, 4th and 5th graders wrote on a digitiser words that were mono-syllables phonologically (e.g. "barque" =…
Descriptors: Syllables, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Educational Technology
Fazio, Lisa K.; Marsh, Elizabeth J. – Cognition, 2008
Early school-aged children listened to stories that contained correct and incorrect facts. All ages answered more questions correctly after having heard the correct fact in the story. Only the older children, however, produced story errors on a later general knowledge test. Source errors did not drive the increased suggestibility in older…
Descriptors: Children, Learning Processes, Evaluation, Error Correction

Peer reviewed
Direct link
