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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results
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Lane, Jonathan D.; Harris, Paul L.; Gelman, Susan A.; Wellman, Henry M. – Developmental Psychology, 2014
Children and adults often encounter counterintuitive claims that defy their perceptions. We examined factors that influence children's acceptance of such claims. Children ages 3-6 years were shown familiar objects (e.g., a rock), were asked to identify the objects, and were then told that each object was something else (e.g., that the rock…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Physical Characteristics, Young Children, Task Analysis
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Gelman, Susan A.; Ware, Elizabeth A.; Manczak, Erika M.; Graham, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2013
The present studies test 2 hypotheses: (1) that pedagogical contexts especially convey generic information (Csibra & Gergely, 2009) and (2) that young children are sensitive to this aspect of pedagogy. We examined generic language (e.g., "'Elephants' live in Africa") in 3 studies, focusing on informational versus narrative children's books (Study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Childrens Literature, Parent Child Relationship
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Noles, Nicholaus S.; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Our goal in the present study was to evaluate the claim that category labels affect children's judgments of visual similarity. We presented preschool children with discriminable and identical sets of animal pictures and asked them to make perceptual judgments in the presence or absence of labels. Our findings indicate that children who are asked…
Descriptors: Criticism, Classification, Preschool Children, Stimuli
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Noles, Nicholaus S.; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Sloutsky and Fisher (2012) attempt to reframe the results presented in Noles and Gelman (2012) as a pure replication of their original work validating the similarity, induction, naming, and categorization (SINC) model. However, their critique fails to engage with the central findings reported in Noles and Gelman, and their reanalysis fails to…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Classification, Comparative Analysis, Models
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Kushnir, Tamar; Wellman, Henry M.; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Preschoolers' causal learning from intentional actions--causal interventions--is subject to a self-agency bias. The authors propose that this bias is evidence-based, in other words, that it is responsive to causal uncertainty. In the current studies, two causes (one child controlled, one experimenter controlled) were associated with one or two…
Descriptors: Inferences, Preschool Children, Attribution Theory, Intervention
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Raman, Lakshmi; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
The present studies examined beliefs concerning the impact of psychosocial factors in the transmission of contagious illness, injuries, and disgust. In Studies 1 and 2, participants ranging from preschoolers through adults judged the likelihood that a character would get sick (or injured) after being contaminated by another individual who was…
Descriptors: Injuries, Personality, Emotional Response, Communicable Diseases
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Gelman, Susan A.; Raman, Lakshmi – Developmental Psychology, 2007
Generic noun phrases ("Birds lay eggs") are important for expressing knowledge about abstract kinds. The authors hypothesized that genericity would be part of gist memory, such that young children would appropriately recall whether sentences were presented as generic or specific. In 4 experiments, preschoolers and college students (N = 280) heard…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Sentences, Long Term Memory, Nouns
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Ware, Elizabeth A.; Gelman, Susan A.; Kleinberg, Felicia – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2013
An important developmental task is learning to organize experience by forming conceptual relations among entities. (For example, a "lion" and a "snake" can be linked because both are animals; a lion and a cage can be linked because the "lion" lives in the "cage".) We propose that representational medium (i.e., pictures vs. objects) plays an…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Relationship, Visual Aids, Mothers
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Raman, Lakshmi; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2005
The authors conducted 4 studies suggesting that children attribute different modes of transmission to genetic disorders and contagious illnesses. Study 1 presented preschoolers through 5th graders and adults with "switched-at-birth" scenarios for various disorders. Study 2 presented preschoolers with the same disorders but used contagion links in…
Descriptors: Communicable Diseases, Cues, Genetics, Diseases
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Hollander, Michelle A.; Gelman, Susan A.; Star, Jon – Developmental Psychology, 2002
Two studies used a comprehension task and an elicited production task to examine whether preschool children and adults appreciated the semantic properties of generic utterances. Findings indicated that in both tasks, 4-year-olds and adults treated generics ("bears live in caves") as distinct from both indefinites ("some") and universal quantifiers…
Descriptors: Adults, Comparative Analysis, Language Processing, Nouns
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Ross, Brian H.; Gelman, Susan A.; Rosengren, Karl S. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2005
Children learn many new categories and make inferences about these categories. Much work has examined how children make inferences on the basis of category knowledge. However, inferences may also affect what is learned about a category. Four experiments examine whether category-based inferences during category learning influence category knowledge…
Descriptors: Classification, Inferences, Affective Behavior, Knowledge Level
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Morris, Suzanne C.; Taplin, John E.; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2000
Three experiments investigated use of vitalistic explanations for biological phenomena by 5- and 10-year-olds and by adults. Results replicated the original Japanese finding of vitalistic thinking among English-speaking 5-year-olds, identified the more active component of vitalism as a belief in the transfer of energy during biological processes,…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Beliefs, Biology
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Heyman, Gail D.; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2000
Four studies with kindergarten through fifth graders and adults examined the development of reasoning about the origins of psychological traits. Results suggested an age-related increase in the tendency to distinguish among different psychological traits, and that over time, individuals come to believe that psychological traits are determined…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Beliefs, Children
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Heyman, Gail D.; Gelman, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Investigated age differences from early childhood to adulthood in the capacity to understand--in a psychologically meaningful way--traits in stories wherein main characters perform actions based on a positive, negative, or incidental motive that result in an emotional consequence for another character. Found that even 5- to 6-year-olds made trait…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Child Development
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Diesendruck, Gil; Gelman, Susan A.; Lebowitz, Kim – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Four studies examined the influence of essentialist information such as internal properties and perceptual similarity on 3-, 4-, and 5-year olds' interpretations of labels. Results suggested that children have essentialist beliefs about animals, but not about artifacts, and that these beliefs interact with children's assumptions about word meaning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Language Acquisition, Performance Factors
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