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Showing 1,246 to 1,260 of 5,768 results
Wells, Melissa; Morrongiello, Barbara A.; Kane, Alexa – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2012
Objective: Research on children's risk of injury reveals that parent and child factors are often interrelated. This study examined relations between children's risk taking, parent appraisal of this risk taking, and children's rate of injury in youth 8 and 9 years old. Methods: Responses to questionnaires and laboratory tasks were used to examine…
Descriptors: Mothers, Injuries, Parent Child Relationship, Risk
Crean, Hugh F. – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2012
This study examines a cross-sectional structural equation model of participation in youth activities, neighborhood adult support, individual decision making skills, and delinquent behavior in urban middle school youths (n = 2611). Results indicate extracurricular activity participation had both direct and indirect associations with delinquent…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Extracurricular Activities, Delinquency, Clubs
Zhang, Xiao; Nurmi, Jari-Erik – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2012
Based on a two-year and three-wave longitudinal sample of 118 Chinese preschoolers, the present study examined the cross-lagged associations between teacher-child relationships and social competence, and the cross-system generalization of social competence between home and school. At each of the three waves, teachers rated the children's…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Longitudinal Studies, Preschool Children, Correlation
Fletcher-Watson, Sue; Leekam, Susan R.; Connolly, Brenda; Collis, Jess M.; Findlay, John M.; McConachie, Helen; Rodgers, Jacqui – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Change blindness refers to the difficulty most people find in detecting a difference between two pictures when these are presented successively, with a brief interruption between. Attention at the site of the change is required for detection. A number of studies have investigated change blindness in adults and children with autism spectrum…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Blindness, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Morelen, Diana; Zeman, Janice; Perry-Parrish, Carisa; Anderson, Ellen – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
This research examined national, regional, developmental, and gender differences in children's reported management of anger and sadness. Participants (8-15 years) were 103 Ghanaian children from a village setting, 142 Ghanaian children from a middle-class urban context, 106 Kenyan children from an impoverished urban context, and 170 children from…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Urban Areas, Foreign Countries, Gender Differences
Waters, Gillian M.; Beck, Sarah R. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
In two experiments, we investigated whether 4- to 5-year-old children's ability to demonstrate their understanding of aspectuality was influenced by how the test question was phrased. In Experiment 1, 60 children chose whether to look or feel to gain information about a hidden object (identifiable by sight or touch). Test questions referred either…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Spatial Ability, Perception
Mills, Candice M.; Landrum, Asheley R. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Two studies examined developmental differences in how children weigh capability and objectivity when evaluating potential judges. In Study 1, 84 6- to 12-year-olds and adults were told stories about pairs of judges that varied in capability (i.e., perceptual capacity) and objectivity (i.e., the relationship to a contestant) and were asked to…
Descriptors: Young Children, Competition, Conflict, Evaluative Thinking
Behne, Tanya; Liszkowski, Ulf; Carpenter, Malinda; Tomasello, Michael – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
This study explored whether infants aged 12 months already recognize the communicative function of pointing gestures. Infants participated in a task requiring them to comprehend an adult's informative pointing gesture to the location of a hidden toy. They mostly succeeded in this task, which required them to infer that the adult was attempting to…
Descriptors: Infants, Toys, Comprehension, Communication Skills
Perdijk, Kors; Schreuder, Robert; Baayen, R. Harald; Verhoeven, Ludo – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Dutch children, from the second and fourth grade of primary school, were each given a visual lexical decision test on 210 Dutch monomorphemic words. After removing words not recognized by a majority of the younger group, (lexical) decisions were analysed by mixed-model regression methods to see whether morphological Family Size influenced decision…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Grade 2, Cognitive Processes, Indo European Languages
Wang, Bo; Low, Jason; Jing, Zhang; Qinghua, Qu – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Mandarin-speaking preschoolers in Mainland China (3- to 4-year-olds; N = 192) were tested for dissociations between anticipatory looking (AL) and verbal judgments on false-belief tasks. The dissociation between the two kinds of understanding was robust despite direct false-belief test questions using a Mandarin specific think-falsely verb and…
Descriptors: Tests, Form Classes (Languages), Foreign Countries, Cognitive Development
San Juan, Valerie; Astington, Janet Wilde – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Recent advancements in the field of infant false-belief reasoning have brought into question whether performance on implicit and explicit measures of false belief is driven by the same level of representational understanding. The success of infants on implicit measures has also raised doubt over the role that language development plays in the…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Beliefs, Theory of Mind, Cognitive Development
Vierkant, Tillmann – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Holding content explicitly requires a form of self-knowledge. But what does the relevant self-knowledge look like? Using theory of mind as an example, this paper argues that the correct answer to this question will have to take into account the crucial role of language-based deliberation but warns against the standard assumption that explicitness…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Beliefs, Metacognition, Cognitive Development
He, Zijing; Bolz, Matthias; Baillargeon, Renee – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Recent research suggests that infants and toddlers succeed at a wide range of non-elicited-response false-belief tasks (i.e., tasks that do not require children to answer a direct question about a mistaken agent's likely behaviour). However, one exception to this generalization comes from verbal anticipatory-looking tasks, which have produced…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Cognitive Development, Theory of Mind, Beliefs
Yott, Jessica; Poulin-Dubois, Diane – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
It has been suggested that infants' performance on the false belief task can be explained by the use of behavioural rules. To test this hypothesis, 18-month-old infants were trained to learn the new rule that an object that disappeared in location A could be found in location B. Infants were then administered a false belief task based on the…
Descriptors: Infants, Beliefs, Theory of Mind, Executive Function
de Villiers, Peter A.; de Villiers, Jill G. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
Deception is a controversial aspect of theory of mind, and researchers disagree about whether it entails an understanding of the false beliefs of one's opponent. The present study asks whether children with delayed language and delayed explicit false belief reasoning can succeed on explicit deception tasks. Participants were 45 orally taught deaf…
Descriptors: Deafness, Children, Deception, Beliefs

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