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Luchkina, Elena; Morgan, James L.; Williams, Deijah J.; Sobel, David M. – Child Development, 2020
This study examined how inferences about epistemic competence and generalized labeling errors influence children's selective word learning. Three- to 4-year-olds (N = 128) learned words from informants who asked questions about objects, mentioning either correct or incorrect labels. Such questions do not convey stark differences in informants'…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Error Patterns
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Goksun, Tilbe; George, Nathan R.; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Golinkoff, Roberta M. – Child Development, 2013
How do children evaluate complex causal events? This study investigates preschoolers' representation of "force dynamics" in causal scenes, asking whether (a) children understand how single and dual forces impact an object's movement and (b) this understanding varies across cause types (Cause, Enable, Prevent). Three-and-a half- to…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Cognitive Processes, Child Development, Motion
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Geier, Charles F.; Luna, Beatriz – Child Development, 2012
Inhibitory control and incentive processes underlie decision making, yet few studies have explicitly examined their interaction across development. Here, the effects of potential rewards and losses on inhibitory control in 64 adolescents (13- to 17-year-olds) and 42 young adults (18- to 29-year-olds) were examined using an incentivized antisaccade…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Inhibition, Rewards, Young Adults
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Cicchetti, Dante; Rogosch, Fred A.; Howe, Mark L.; Toth, Sheree L. – Child Development, 2010
This investigation examined basic memory processes, cortisol, and dissociation in maltreated children. School-aged children (age range = 6-13), 143 maltreated and 174 nonmaltreated, were administered the California Verbal Learning Test-Children (D. C. Delis, J. H. Kramer, E. Kaplan, & B. A. Ober, 1994) in a week-long camp setting, daily…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Verbal Learning, Recognition (Psychology), Recall (Psychology)
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Apperly, Ian A.; Warren, Frances; Andrews, Benjamin J.; Grant, Jay; Todd, Sophie – Child Development, 2011
On belief-desire reasoning tasks, children first pass tasks involving true belief before those involving false belief, and tasks involving positive desire before those involving negative desire. The current study examined belief-desire reasoning in participants old enough to pass all such tasks. Eighty-three 6- to 11-year-olds and 20 adult…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Developmental Continuity, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Rosengren, Karl S.; Gutierrez, Isabel T.; Anderson, Kathy N.; Schein, Stevie S. – Child Development, 2009
Scale errors refer to behaviors where young children attempt to perform an action on an object that is too small to effectively accommodate the behavior. The goal of this study was to examine the frequency and characteristics of scale errors in everyday life. To do so, the researchers collected parental reports of children's (age range = 13-21…
Descriptors: Young Children, Measures (Individuals), Language Acquisition, Error Patterns
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Butterworth, George – Child Development, 1976
To establish the spatial generality of perseverative errors in infant manual search, a group of infants aged 8-11 months performed Piaget's Stage IV task with an object hidden at successive locations in the vertical plane. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Egocentrism, Error Patterns, Infants, Perceptual Development
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Brainerd, Charles J. – Child Development, 1977
This paper presents a psychometric analysis of the criterion problem in neo-Piagetian concept development research. The evidence shows that false negative and false positive criterion errors have the same effect on the null hypothesis so that the criterion with the lowest error rate should be utilized. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Error Patterns, Measurement Techniques, Psychometrics
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Taylor, Marjorie; Flavel, John H. – Child Development, 1984
Two studies with three-year-old children tested the hypothesis that, whereas errors of phenomenism predominate when children are asked about objects' real and apparent properties, errors of intellectual realism predominate when children are asked about objects' real and apparent identities. Results provided some support for the property-identity…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Error Patterns, Hypothesis Testing, Preschool Children
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Harris, P. L. – Child Development, 1973
Three experiments are presented which examine the ability of 10-month-old infants to search in a new hiding place. (Author)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Error Patterns, Infants, Performance Factors
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Eska, Brunhilde; Black, Kathryn Norcross – Child Development, 1971
Designed to reassess the relationship between response speed, errors, and IQ for both sexes, and to evaluate the findings in relation to the overall pattern of data accumulated from previous investigations. (Author/AJ)
Descriptors: Conceptual Tempo, Error Patterns, Grade 3, Intelligence Quotient
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Silverstein, A. B.; And Others – Child Development, 1982
Reports on a study designed (1) to modify one of the few existing standardized tests of conservation so that it can be used to assess the conservation of identity as well as the conservation of equivalence and (2) to use both versions of the test to gather additional evidence on the question of developmental priority among young children. (MP)
Descriptors: Conservation (Concept), Error Patterns, Research Problems, Test Construction
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Spencer, John P.; Smith, Linda B.; Thelen, Esther – Child Development, 2001
Five experiments tested hypothesis that the A-not-B error results from general processes that make goal-directed actions to remembered locations. Findings showed that 2-year-olds' performance on the A trial was accurate. When the object was hidden at Location B, searches after 10-second delay were biased in the direction of Location A. This bias…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Error Patterns, Memory, Prior Learning
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DiSimoni, Frank G. – Child Development, 1975
Examined 3- and 4-year-olds with regard to their abilities in recognizing differences between certain speech sounds and their performance in imitating and spontaneously generating the same sounds in familiar words. Results are related to a theory of phonemic development in children. (Author/SDH)
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Imitation, Perceptual Development, Phonemes
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Holmes, Deborah Lott; Peper, Richard J. – Child Development, 1977
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Reading Difficulty
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