NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 1 to 15 of 147 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Brandon M. Woo; Shari Liu; Elizabeth S. Spelke – Developmental Science, 2024
Does knowledge of other people's minds grow from concrete experience to abstract concepts? Cognitive scientists have hypothesized that infants' first-person experience, acting on their own goals, leads them to understand others' actions and goals. Indeed, classic developmental research suggests that before infants reach for objects, they do not…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Processes, Inferences, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Ferguson, Heather J.; Wimmer, Lena; Black, Jo; Barzy, Mahsa; Williams, David – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022
We report an event-related brain potential (ERP) experiment that tests whether autistic adults are able to maintain and switch between counterfactual and factual worlds. Participants (N = 48) read scenarios that set up a factual or counterfactual scenario, then either maintained the counterfactual world or switched back to the factual world. When…
Descriptors: Autism, Brain, Adults, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Maria Alice Baraldi; Filippo Domaneschi – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2024
Research investigating pragmatic abilities in healthy aging suggests that both production and comprehension might be compromised; however, it is not clear how pragmatic abilities evolve in late adulthood, as well as when difficulties are more likely to arise. The aim of this study is to investigate the decline of pragmatic skills in aging, and to…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Skills, Ability, Aging (Individuals)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Lindsay C. Bowman; Amanda C. Brandone – Developmental Science, 2024
Behavioral research demonstrates a critical transition in preschooler's mental-state understanding (i.e., theory of mind; ToM), revealed most starkly in performance on tasks about a character's false belief (e.g., about an object's location). Questions remain regarding the neural and cognitive processes differentiating children who pass versus…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, Theory of Mind
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Lewis J. Baker; Hongyue Li; Hugo Hammond; Christopher B. Jaeger; Anne Havard; Jonathan D. Lane; Caroline E. Harriott; Daniel T. Levin – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
As a wide variety of intelligent technologies become part of everyday life, researchers have explored how people conceptualize agents that in some ways act and think like living things but are clearly machines. Much of this work draws upon the idea that people readily default to generalizing human-like properties to such agents, and only pare back…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Abstract Reasoning, Attribution Theory
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Ferrari, Elisabetta; Butti, Niccolò; Gagliardi, Chiara; Romaniello, Romina; Borgatti, Renato; Urgesi, Cosimo – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2023
According to current accounts of social cognition, the emergence of verbal and non-verbal components of social perception might rely on the acquisition of different cognitive abilities. These components might be differently sensitive to the pattern of neuropsychological impairments in congenital neurodevelopmental disorders. Here, we explored the…
Descriptors: Patients, Intellectual Disability, Developmental Disabilities, Congenital Impairments
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Jenny Marttila; Ruben Fukkink; Maarit Silvén – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2024
The present study applied Video Enhanced Reflective Practice (VERP) to promote and assess Finnish professionals' interactional competence by means of stimulated recall during three group-based shared review discussions. A VERP trainer guided the professionals to reflect on children's, their own, and colleagues' actions and mental states based on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kallitsounaki, Aimilia; Williams, David M.; Lind, Sophie E. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2021
Gender nonconformity is substantially elevated in the autistic population, but the reasons for this are currently unclear. In a recent study, Kallitsounaki and Williams (Kallitsounaki and Williams, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2020; authors 1 and 2 of the current paper) found significant relations between autistic traits and both…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Sexual Identity, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Altschuler, Melody R.; Faja, Susan – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022
The present study evaluates the test-retest reliability of six theory of mind (ToM) tasks that measured cognitive, affective, and spontaneous ToM in 7 to 11 year-old children with autism spectrum disorder. Our results revealed considerable variation in test-retest reliability depending on the type of ToM task, which ranged from poor to good with…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Task Analysis, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Filippi, Courtney; Choi, Yeo Bi; Fox, Nathan A.; Woodward, Amanda L. – Developmental Science, 2020
The mechanisms that support infant action processing are thought to be involved in the development of later social cognition. While a growing body of research demonstrates longitudinal links between action processing and explicit theory of mind (TOM), it remains unclear why this link emerges in some measures of action encoding and not others. In…
Descriptors: Infants, Theory of Mind, Cognitive Processes, Preschool Children
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Simpraga, Sonja; Weiland, Ricarda F.; Mansvelder, Huibert D.; Polderman, Tinca J. C.; Begeer, Sander; Smit, Dirk J. A.; Linkenkaer-Hansen, Klaus – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2021
Mind wandering constitutes a major part of everyday experience and is inherently related to how we feel and identify ourselves. Thus, probing the character and content of thoughts and feelings experienced during mind-wandering episodes could lead to a better understanding of the human mind in health and disease. How mind wandering and spontaneous…
Descriptors: Adults, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kim, Sunae; Kristen-Antonow, Susanne; Sodian, Beate – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2021
The metarepresentational aspect of early pretend play (make-believe activities where children create or participate in creating a new situation different from a real one) has been theoretically debated. In the present longitudinal study of N = 83 children, we tested for predictive relations of shared attention at 12-18 months, implicit false…
Descriptors: Play, Attention, Beliefs, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Grinstead, John – Journal of Child Language, 2021
Interface Delay is a theory of syntactic development, which attempts to explain an array of constructions that are slow to develop, which are characterized by being sensitive to discourse-pragmatic considerations of the type associated with the natural semantic class of definites. The theory claims that neither syntax itself, nor the…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Syntax, Form Classes (Languages), Pragmatics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Poortaheri, Forough; Yazdi, Seyed Amir Amin; Kareshki, Hosein; Rahimi, Mehdi – Journal of Cognitive Education and Psychology, 2022
This study was conducted with the aim to design a parenting training program based on cognitive-emotional mediation and evaluating the effectiveness of this program on increasing mothers' literacy of interaction and children's cognitive modifiability in the field of metacognition and theory of mind. The curriculum was designed with a combination…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Mothers, Parent Education, Metacognition
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Moore, Christi Camper; Moore, David Richard – Journal of Dance Education, 2021
This article connects the "Theory of Extended Mind" with the use of three-dimensional, physical objects in dance pedagogy. The theory of the extended mind supposes that cognition is an activity that reaches out from the mind to the body and to the environment. In particular, we take up Dewey's pragmatic Instrumentalism as a framework…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Theory of Mind, Problem Solving, Teaching Methods
Previous Page | Next Page »
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10