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Showing 301 to 315 of 338 results Save | Export
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Pierroutsakos, Sophia L.; DeLoache, Judy S.; Gound, Mary; Bernard, E. Nicole – Developmental Science, 2005
In two experiments on very young children's response to the orientation of pictures and objects, 18-, 24- and 30-month-old children showed no preference for upright pictures over inverted ones. More importantly, we found that children in all three age groups were equally accurate and equally fast at identifying depicted objects regardless of…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Pictorial Stimuli, Task Analysis, Cognitive Processes
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Carver, Leslie J.; Meltzoff, Andrew N.; Dawson, Geraldine – Developmental Science, 2006
We measured infants' recognition of familiar and unfamiliar 3-D objects and their 2-D representations using event-related potentials (ERPs). Infants differentiated familiar from unfamiliar objects when viewing them in both two and three dimensions. However, differentiation between the familiar and novel objects occurred more quickly when infants…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Infants, Cognitive Processes, Diagnostic Tests
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Hogan, Alexandra M.; Vargha-Khadem, Faraneh; Kirkham, Fenella J.; Baldeweg, Torsten – Developmental Science, 2005
This study investigated the development of the frontal lobe action-monitoring system from late childhood and adolescence to early adulthood using ERP markers of error processing. Error negativity (ERN) and correct response negativity (CRN) potentials were recorded while adolescents and adults (aged 12-22 years, n = 23) performed two forced-choice…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes
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Vallortigara, Giorgio; Feruglio, Marco; Sovrano, Valeria Anna – Developmental Science, 2005
It has been found that disoriented children could use geometric information in combination with landmark information to reorient themselves in large but not in small experimental spaces. We tested domestic chicks in the same task and found that they were able to conjoin geometric and nongeometric (landmark) information to reorient themselves in…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Children, Cognitive Science, Animals
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Striano, Tricia; Stahl, Daniel – Developmental Science, 2005
In Study 1, 54 3-, 6- and 9-month-old infants interacted with an adult stranger who engaged in a face-to-face (dyadic) exchange. Dyadic interaction was halted when the adult turned away to look at an object. In a Joint Attention condition, the adult alternated visual attention between the infant and the object, and in a Look Away condition she…
Descriptors: Attention, Infants, Adults, Interaction
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Bialystok, Ellen; Martin, Michelle M. – Developmental Science, 2004
In a previous study, a bilingual advantage for preschool children in solving the dimensional change card sort task was attributed to superiority in inhibition of attention (Bialystok, 1999). However, the task includes difficult representational demands to encode and interpret the task stimuli, and bilinguals may also have profited from superior…
Descriptors: Semantics, Preschool Children, Inhibition, Bilingualism
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Bertin, Evelin; Bhatt, Ramesh S. – Developmental Science, 2004
Adults readily detect changes in face patterns brought about by the inversion of eyes and mouth when the faces are viewed upright but not when they are viewed upside down. Research suggests that this illusion (the Thatcher illusion) is caused by the interfering effects of face inversion on the processing of second-order relational information…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Infants
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Robertson, Steven S.; Guckenheimer, John; Masnick, Amy M.; Bacher, Leigh F. – Developmental Science, 2004
Human infants actively forage for visual information from the moment of birth onward. Although we know a great deal about how stimulus characteristics influence looking behavior in the first few postnatal weeks, we know much less about the intrinsic dynamics of the behavior. Here we show that a simple stochastic dynamical system acts…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Infants, Visual Perception, Eye Movements
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Sluzenski, Julia; Newcombe, Nora; Ottinger, Wendy – Developmental Science, 2004
The purposes of this research were to examine the developmental relation between reality monitoring and episodic memory, to link reality monitoring to autobiographical memory by using extended naturalistic events, and to examine prefrontal functioning as a potential contributor to development in reality monitoring and episodic memory. In…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Memory, Preschool Children, Cognitive Processes
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Casler, Krista; Kelemen, Deborah – Developmental Science, 2005
Tool use is central to interdisciplinary debates about the evolution and distinctiveness of human intelligence, yet little is actually known about how human conceptions of artifacts develop. Results across these two studies show that even 2-year-olds approach artifacts in ways distinct from captive tool-using monkeys. Contrary to adult intuition,…
Descriptors: Social Cognition, Classification, Design, Developmental Stages
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Kelly, David J.; Quinn, Paul C.; Slater, Alan M.; Lee, Kang; Gibson, Alan; Smith, Michael; Ge, Liezhong; Pascalis, Olivier – Developmental Science, 2005
Adults are sensitive to the physical differences that define ethnic groups. However, the age at which we become sensitive to ethnic differences is currently unclear. Our study aimed to clarify this by testing newborns and young infants for sensitivity to ethnicity using a visual preference (VP) paradigm. While newborn infants demonstrated no…
Descriptors: Neonates, Ethnic Groups, Infants, Age Differences
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Jarrold, Christopher; Gilchrist, Iain D.; Bender, Alison – Developmental Science, 2005
Individuals with autism show relatively strong performance on tasks that require them to identify the constituent parts of a visual stimulus. This is assumed to be the result of a bias towards processing the local elements in a display that follows from a weakened ability to integrate information at the global level. The results of the current…
Descriptors: Autism, Task Analysis, Performance, Visual Stimuli
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Ware, Elizabeth A.; Uttal, David H.; Wetter, Emily K.; DeLoache, Judy S. – Developmental Science, 2006
Prior research (DeLoache, Uttal & Rosengren, 2004) has documented that 18- to 30-month-olds occasionally make scale errors: they attempt to fit their bodies into or onto miniature objects (e.g. a chair) that are far too small for them. The current study explores whether scale errors are limited to actions that directly involve the child's…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Toys, Error Patterns, Young Children
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Hodent, Celia; Bryant, Peter; Houde, Olivier – Developmental Science, 2005
A fundamental question in developmental science is how brains with and without language compute numbers. Measuring young children's verbal reactions in France (Paris) and in England (Oxford), here we show that, although there is a general arithmetic ability for small numbers that is shared by monkeys and preverbal infants, the development of such…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English, French, Correlation
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Bish, Joel P.; Ferrante, Samantha M.; McDonald-McGinn, Donna; Zackai, Elaine; Simon, Tony J. – Developmental Science, 2005
Using an adaptation of the Attentional Networks Test, we investigated aspects of executive control in children with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (DS22q11.2), a common but not well understood disorder that produces non-verbal cognitive deficits and a marked incidence of psychopathology. The data revealed that children with DS22q11.2…
Descriptors: Schizophrenia, Conflict, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Psychopathology
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