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Showing 1 to 15 of 110 results
Fisher, Anna; Thiessen, Erik; Godwin, Karrie; Kloos, Heidi; Dickerson, John – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Selective sustained attention (SSA) is crucial for higher order cognition. Factors promoting SSA are described as exogenous or endogenous. However, there is little research specifying how these factors interact during development, due largely to the paucity of developmentally appropriate paradigms. We report findings from a novel paradigm designed…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Models, Preschool Children, Young Children
Zosh, Jennifer M.; Feigenson, Lisa – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Accurate representation of a changing environment requires individuation--the ability to determine how many numerically distinct objects are present in a scene. Much research has characterized early individuation abilities by identifying which object features infants can use to individuate throughout development. However, despite the fact that…
Descriptors: Infants, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Ability, Task Analysis
Benenson, Joyce F.; Quinn, Amanda; Stella, Sandra – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Evidence from ethnographic, observational, and experimental studies with humans converges to suggest that males affiliate more than females with unrelated, familiar same-sex peers, but this has never been examined directly. With this aim, we compared frequency of affiliation with a single, randomly chosen, familiar same-sex peer for the two sexes…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Peer Relationship, Young Children, Social Behavior
Creel, Sarah C.; Jimenez, Sofia R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Talker variability in speech influences language processing from infancy through adulthood and is inextricably embedded in the very cues that identify speech sounds. Yet little is known about developmental changes in the processing of talker information. On one account, children have not yet learned to separate speech sound variability from…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Adults, Age Differences, Recognition (Psychology)
DeCaro, Marci S.; Rittle-Johnson, Bethany – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Both exploration and explicit instruction are thought to benefit learning in many ways, but much less is known about how the two can be combined. We tested the hypothesis that engaging in exploratory activities prior to receiving explicit instruction better prepares children to learn from the instruction. Children (159 second- to fourth-grade…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Mathematical Applications, Discovery Learning
Bauer, Patricia J.; Doydum, Ayzit O.; Pathman, Thanujeni; Larkina, Marina; Guler, O. Evren; Burch, Melissa – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Episodic memory is defined as the ability to recall specific past events located in a particular time and place. Over the preschool and into the school years, there are clear developmental changes in memory for when events took place. In contrast, little is known about developmental changes in memory for where events were experienced. In the…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Geographic Location, Experience
Mann, Anne; Moeller, Korbinian; Pixner, Silvia; Kaufmann, Liane; Nuerk, Hans-Christoph – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
The development of two-digit number processing in children, and in particular the influence of place-value understanding, has recently received increasing research interest. However, place-value influences leading to decomposed processing have not yet been investigated for multi-digit numbers beyond the two-digit number range in children.…
Descriptors: Number Concepts, Numbers, Cognitive Processes, Grade 2
Von Holzen, Katie; Mani, Nivedita – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
We examined how words from bilingual toddlers' second language (L2) primed recognition of related target words in their first language (L1). On critical trials, prime-target word pairs were either (a) phonologically related, with L2 primes overlapped phonologically with L1 target words [e.g., "slide" (L2 prime)-"Kleid" (L1 target, "dress")], or…
Descriptors: Evidence, Priming, Word Recognition, Interference (Language)
Luwel, Koen; Foustana, Ageliki; Papadatos, Yiannis.; Verschaffel, Lieven – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
A test-intervention-test study was conducted investigating the role of intelligence on four parameters of strategy competence in the context of a numerosity judgment task. Moreover, the effectiveness of two feedback types on these four parameters was tested. In the two test sessions, the choice/no-choice method was used to assess the strategy…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Intelligence, Intervention, Role
Gurland, Suzanne T.; Glowacky, Victoria C. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
To investigate children's theories of motivation, we asked 166 children (8-12 years of age) to rate the effect of various motivational strategies on task interest, over the short and long terms, in activities described as appealing or unappealing. Children viewed the rewards strategy as resulting in greatest interest except when implemented over…
Descriptors: Motivation Techniques, Student Motivation, Individual Differences, Rewards
Bush, Nicole R.; Alkon, Abbey; Obradovic, Jelena; Stamperdahl, Juliet; Boyce, W. Thomas – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Current methods of assessing children's physiological "stress reactivity" may be confounded by psychomotor activity, biasing estimates of the relation between reactivity and health. We examined the joint and independent contributions of psychomotor activity and challenge reactivity during a protocol for 5- and 6-year-old children (N = 338).…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Psychophysiology, Psychomotor Skills, Stress Variables
Adrian, Molly; Zeman, Janice; Veits, Gina – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
This investigation analyzed the methods used over the past 35 years to study emotion regulation (ER) in children. Articles published from 1975 through 2010 were identified in 42 child clinical, developmental, and emotion psychology journals. Overall, 61.1% of published ER articles relied on one method and 23.6% used two methods. Analyses revealed…
Descriptors: Young Children, Emotional Development, Emotional Response, Evaluation
Piazza, Jared; Bering, Jesse M.; Ingram, Gordon – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Two child groups (5-6 and 8-9 years of age) participated in a challenging rule-following task while they were (a) told that they were in the presence of a watchful invisible person ("Princess Alice"), (b) observed by a real adult, or (c) unsupervised. Children were covertly videotaped performing the task in the experimenter's absence. Older…
Descriptors: Cheating, Individual Differences, Child Psychology, Experimental Psychology
Howe, Mark L.; Garner, Sarah R.; Charlesworth, Monica; Knott, Lauren – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Can false memories have a positive consequence on human cognition? In two experiments, we investigated whether false memories could prime insight problem-solving tasks. Children and adults were asked to solve compound remote associate task (CRAT) problems, half of which had been primed by the presentation of Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) lists…
Descriptors: Memory, Experiments, Problem Solving, Children
Conners, Frances A.; Loveall, Susan J.; Moore, Marie S.; Hume, Laura E.; Maddox, Christopher D. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
The self-teaching hypothesis suggests that children learn orthographic structure of words through the experience of phonologically recoding them. The current study is an individual differences analysis of the self-teaching hypothesis. A total of 40 children in Grades 2 and 3 (7-9 years of age) completed tests of phonological recoding, word…
Descriptors: Identification, Grade 2, Individual Differences, Independent Study

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