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Showing 31 to 35 of 35 results Save | Export
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Kavanaugh, Robert, D.; Harris, Paul L. – Developmental Psychology, 1994
Studied children's grasp of make-believe transformations they had seen enacted. Children indicated the pretend outcome by choosing a picture depicting no change or a picture depicting the pretend change. Older children chose correctly, even with the addition of a picture of an irrelevant transformation, but younger children did not. Autistic…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Age Differences, Autism, Cognitive Development
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Harris, Paul L.; And Others – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 1981
Children 6, 11, and 15 years old were interviewed about their concept of emotion. Replies indicated the child's concept of emotion changed markedly between 6 and 11 but indicated no marked changes thereafter. The changing conception of emotion was manifested in replies regarding the identification, regulation, and effects of emotion. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Children
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Tenenbaum, Harriet R.; Visscher, Paloma; Pons, Francisco; Harris, Paul L. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2004
Research on children's understanding of emotion has rarely focused on children from nonindustrialised countries, who may develop an understanding at different ages as compared to children reared in industrialised countries. Quechua children from an agro-pastoralist village were given an adapted version of the Test of Emotion Comprehension (TEC) to…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Cognitive Development, American Indians, Comparative Analysis
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Harris, Paul L.; And Others – Child Development, 1986
Describes two experiments that examined children's understanding of the distinction between real and apparent emotion. Discusses the findings in relation to research concerning children's concept of mind, their grasp of the appearance-reality distinction; their ability to produce complex, embedded justifications; and their ideas about emotion.…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Ability
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Harris, Paul L.; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1986
English-speaking and Dutch-speaking children were asked to pick the big, tall, or long members of pairs of bricks. Comprehension improved with age but older children in both groups were prone to choose the taller (but smaller) of two objects when asked to point to the bigger one. (SED)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Age Differences, Developmental Stages, Dutch
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