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Showing 2,416 to 2,430 of 5,768 results
Wright, Ingram; Lewis, Vicky; Collis, Glyn M. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
Competence in object search and pretend play are argued to reflect young children's representational abilities and appear delayed in children with Down syndrome relative to social and imitative skills. This paper explores the effects on object search and play of this social strength in children with Down syndrome. Three experiments compared…
Descriptors: Play, Imitation, Down Syndrome, Young Children
Walker, Pamela M.; Hewstone, Miles – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
Research over the past two decades has demonstrated that individuals are better at recognizing and discriminating faces of their own race versus other races. The own-race effect has typically been investigated in relation to recognition memory; however, some evidence supports an own-race effect at the level of perceptual encoding in adults. The…
Descriptors: Race, Whites, Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students
Experience with Visual Barriers and Its Effects on Subsequent Gaze-Following in 12- to 13-Month-Olds
D'Entremont, Barbara; Morgan, Roslyn – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
Thirty 12- to 13-month-olds were tested to determine whether they could use the self as an analogy for understanding others' looking. Using a procedure similar to Brooks and Meltzoff (2002), we examined gaze-following when the adult's view of a target was occluded by a blindfold (blindfold without training). Some infants received experience with…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Barriers, Visual Perception
Krettenauer, Tobias; Eichler, Dana – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
The study investigates adolescents' self-attributed moral emotions following a moral transgression by expanding research with children on the happy-victimizer phenomenon. In a sample of 200 German adolescents from Grades 7, 9, 11, and 13 (M=16.18 years, SD=2.41), participants were confronted with various scenarios describing different moral rule…
Descriptors: Social Desirability, Adolescents, Value Judgment, Moral Development
Roch-Levecq, Anne-Catherine – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
Children with congenital blindness are delayed in understanding other people's minds. The present study examined whether this delay was related to a more primitive form of inter-subjectivity by which infants draw correspondence between parental mirroring of the infant's display and proprioceptive sensations. Twenty children with congenital…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Evidence, Blindness, Emotional Response
Picard, Delphine; Vinter, Annie – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
This study aimed at specifying the content of the representational redescription (RR) process assumed by Karmiloff-Smith (1992) with respect to the emergence of inter-representational flexibility in children's drawing behaviour. We hypothesized that the RR process included part-whole decomposition processes that are essential to the ability to…
Descriptors: Children, Freehand Drawing, Child Behavior, Cognitive Processes
Lee, Anthony; Hobson, R. Peter – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
When children draw pictures of human beings, they reveal things not only about their general intellectual and artistic abilities, but also about their awareness and conception of themselves and others. What might the human figure drawings of children with autism reveal about their images of self and other--and what might they disclose about social…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Freehand Drawing, Autism, Adolescents
Deacon, S. Helene; Bryant, Peter – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
We report on a study designed to examine children's understanding of (1) the connection between root morphemes and the spelling of inflected words and (2) the role of morphological awareness in this understanding. Seven- to 9-year-old children were given clues (e.g. "turn") to the spelling of inflected and control words (e.g. "turning" and…
Descriptors: Spelling, Morphemes, Children, Morphology (Languages)
Phelps, Fiona G.; Doherty-Sneddon, Gwyneth; Warnock, Hannah – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
Looking away from an interlocutor's face during demanding cognitive activity can help adults answer challenging arithmetic and verbal-reasoning questions (Glenberg, Schroeder, & Robertson, 1998). However, such "gaze aversion" (GA) is poorly applied by 5-year-old school children (Doherty-Sneddon, Bruce, Bonner, Longbotham, & Doyle, 2002). In…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Young Children, Eye Movements, Control Groups
Yazbek, Aimee; D'Entremont, Barbara – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
An understanding of intentionality is thought to underlie developing joint attention. Similarly, early social-communicative behaviours have been argued to reflect an appreciation of adult intentionality. This study explored the relation between social-communicative behaviours during the still-face effect at 6 months and joint attention at 12…
Descriptors: Attention, Infants, Longitudinal Studies, Cognitive Processes
Moll, Henrike; Tomasello, Michael – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
The current study sought to determine the age at which children first engage in Level 1 visual perspective-taking, in which they understand that the content of what another person sees in a situation may sometimes differ from what they see. An adult entered the room searching for an object. One candidate object was out in the open, whereas another…
Descriptors: Perspective Taking, Infants, Developmental Stages, Cognitive Development
Striano, Tricia; Vaish, Amrisha; Benigno, Joann P. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
In two studies, the reason that infants in a novel situation look to adults was assessed. In Study 1, 10- and 13-month-old infants encountered a visual cliff that was deep (56 cm) or ambiguous (20 cm). Infants crossed the ambiguous cliff reliably faster than the deep cliff, and the first looks to mother of infants in the deep cliff condition were…
Descriptors: Cues, Mothers, Infants, Information Seeking
Flynn, Emma – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
The processes behind the transition from consistently failing tests of false belief understanding to consistently passing the tests was investigated by tracking changes in children's mental state understanding. Participants were 42 children (aged 3;1 to 4;3). There were two conditions; an experimental condition in which children were tested on a…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Testing, Construct Validity, Verbal Ability
The Valley Task: Understanding Intention from Goal-Directed Motion in Typical Development and Autism
Castelli, Fulvia – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
A novel paradigm investigates the ability to understand an agent's intended goal in children with autism (N = 25), typically developing children (N = 46), and adults (N = 16+12) by watching a non-human agent's kinematic properties alone. Computer animations depict a circle at the bottom of a U-shaped valley rolling up and down its slopes and…
Descriptors: Intention, Children, Autism, Adults
Abu-Rayya, Hisham Motkal – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
This study explored the relationship between ethnic identity, ego identity, and psychological wellbeing among mixed-ethnic adolescents with European mothers and Arab fathers in Israel. One hundred and twenty-seven mixed-ethnic adolescents (13 to 18 years) were instructed to respond to a modified version of Phinney's (1992) Multigroup ethnic…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Self Concept, Arabs, Adolescents

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