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Antonya M. Gonzalez; Allison L. Skinner; Andrew Scott Baron – Developmental Science, 2025
Nonverbal behavior is a ubiquitous, everyday cue that is often used as a basis for social evaluation. Numerous studies indicate that children are sensitive to these signals and form evaluative judgments after viewing positive or negative nonverbal cues directed toward a target. Furthermore, they generalize these judgments to other members of a…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 4, Nonverbal Communication, Childrens Attitudes
Yang, Xin; Naas, Ragnhild; Dunham, Yarrow – Developmental Science, 2022
When seeking to explain social regularities (such as gender differences in the labor market) people often rely on internal features of the targets, frequently neglecting structural and systemic factors external to the targets. For example, people might think women leave the job market after childbirth because they are less competent or are better…
Descriptors: Children, Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning, Sex
Peretz-Lange, Rebecca; Muentener, Paul – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2020
Children hold rich essentialist beliefs about natural and social categories, representing them as discrete (mutually exclusive with sharp boundaries) and stable (with membership remaining constant over an individual's lifespan). Children use essential categories to make inductive inferences about individuals. How do children determine what…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Concept Formation, Cognitive Processes, Classification
Dore, Rebecca A.; Woolley, Jacqueline D.; Hixon, John G. – Grantee Submission, 2018
Children learn about the world through others' testimony, and much of this knowledge likely comes from parents. Furthermore, parents may sometimes want children to share their beliefs about topics on which there is no universal consensus. In discussing such topics, parents may use explicit belief statements (e.g., "Evolution is real") or…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Value Judgment, Young Children, Age Differences