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Showing 1 to 15 of 37 results
Farrar, M. Jeffrey; Ashwell, Sylvia – Cognitive Development, 2012
Language plays a critical role in theory of mind (ToM) development, particularly the understanding of false beliefs (FB). Further, there is some evidence that the development of FB is important for metalinguistic development, such as the understanding of homonyms and synonyms. However, there is debate regarding the nature of this relationship.…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Evidence, Metalinguistics, Beginning Reading
Kim, Sunae; Kalish, Charles W.; Harris, Paul L. – Cognitive Development, 2012
Prior work shows that children can make inductive inferences about objects based on their labels rather than their appearance (Gelman, 2003). A separate line of research shows that children's trust in a speaker's label is selective. Children accept labels from a reliable speaker over an unreliable speaker (e.g., Koenig & Harris, 2005). In the…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Inferences, Classification, Young Children
Friedman, William J. – Cognitive Development, 2011
Recent research on children's thinking about the future has taken multiple directions, many of which are illustrated in the contributions to this special issue. In this commentary the topic is discussed in the context of research on children's understanding of time, and some of the adaptive challenges of thinking about the future are considered.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Research, Children, Thinking Skills
Peer reviewedIverson, Jana M.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Explored the interplay between gestures and words in the early vocabulary of 12 normally developing Italian children at 16 and 20 months of age. Focused on spontaneous production of verbal and gestural types and tokens to assess the diversity and semantic content of the verbal and gestural vocabularies. Results indicated that gestures were used…
Descriptors: Body Language, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedImai, Mutsumi; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
A study with three- and five-year olds contrasted two important proposals regarding children's assumptions about word meanings: the taxonomic assumption proposal and the shape bias proposal. Results suggest that perceptual similarity, particularly shape similarity, is very important in early word meaning but that children gradually shift their…
Descriptors: Classification, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedMiller, Patricia H.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
In memory strategy utilization deficiency, a child spontaneously produces an appropriate strategy but receives little or no benefit from it for recall. Three studies suggest two causes: children's failure to relate the task situation to their event knowledge, or to link the strategy to a second strategy, in this case linking a selective attention…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Memorization, Metacognition
Peer reviewedThomas, Glyn V.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Noting that children who can easily categorize a picture in terms of what it depicts may have difficulty understanding the picture as a representation or thing in itself, four experiments with children around four years old examined their responses to pictures as things in themselves. Results showed that some children had difficulty understanding…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Discrimination Learning, Early Childhood Education, Phenomenology
Peer reviewedRobinson, Elizabeth J.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Five investigations examined three- and four-year olds' conceptions of the relationship between pictures and their referents. Results indicated that preschool children have difficulty holding in mind the distinct properties of picture and real referent, just as they tend to confuse the literal and intended meanings of utterances. (TJQ)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Discrimination Learning, Early Childhood Education, Phenomenology
Peer reviewedWilcox, Teresa; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Within a small bounded space, the location of a hidden object can be coded in terms of distance information, general area of hiding, or the boundary of the space. The use of these three coding strategies by infants was examined using a visual search task. Results indicated boundary information and the nature of the change influenced coding of…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Encoding (Psychology), Infants
Peer reviewedMervis, Carolyn B.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
A study concerned with factors that may affect three-year olds' acquisition of subordinate categories considered salience of the attribute or attributes that differentiate a subordinate category, presence or absence of linguistic input, and child characteristics. Correlational analyses pointed to a series of relationships between child…
Descriptors: Classification, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Individual Characteristics
Peer reviewedCorrigan, Roberta; Stevenson, Colleen – Cognitive Development, 1994
The causal structure of schemas for the actions and states by different classes of English verbs was examined in the elicited narratives of 19 preschool children. Results showed that verbs within a class elicited similar narratives, whereas across classes the event descriptions varied in the animacy of the event participants and the causal…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Child Language, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedGauvain, Mary; Greene, Joelle K. – Cognitive Development, 1994
Children's knowledge of the use of objects helped determine whether children's actions indicate their understanding of the functional use of objects independent of their ability to verbally describe the object or its function. Found that older children made fewer phenomenism errors but that the majority were still able to show the function of the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Concept Formation, Early Childhood Education, Early Experience
Peer reviewedKeenan, Thomas; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Previous research suggests that not until about age six do children recognize that one can gain knowledge through inferential rather than direct means. Three experiments were conducted in which important task information was made more salient to determine whether children's performance in previous research on their understanding of inference had…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Communication (Thought Transfer), Comprehension, Developmental Stages
Peer reviewedPick, Anne D.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
Three studies investigated infants' and young children's perception of the unity of musical events. Results indicated that properties specific to musical instrument families are relevant for young children's perception of musical events. Specific experience with a variety of instruments is evidently not necessary for detecting correspondences of…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Early Childhood Education, Infants, Music
Peer reviewedMacLaren, Rick; Olson, David – Cognitive Development, 1993
Results of a study with children ages three to eight indicated that children's understanding of the concept of surprise changes between three and five years of age. Younger children employed a principle of desirability, whereas older children employed principles of belief violation, indicating that children's understanding of the concept of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Beliefs, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Structures

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