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Showing 1 to 15 of 93 results Save | Export
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Fischer, Jean-Paul – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
This article presents a simple theory according to which the left-right reversal of single digits by 5- and 6-year-old children is mainly due to the application of an implicit right-writing or -orienting rule. A number of nontrivial predictions can be drawn from this theory. First, left-oriented digits (1, 2, 3, 7, and 9) will be reversed more…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Handwriting, Children, Prediction
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Pagán, Ascensión; Blythe, Hazel I.; Liversedge, Simon P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2016
Although previous research has shown that letter position information for the first letter of a parafoveal word is encoded less flexibly than internal word beginning letters (Johnson, Perea & Rayner, 2007; White et al., 2008), it is not clear how positional encoding operates over the initial trigram in English. This experiment explored the…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Experimental Psychology, Reading Processes
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Ewing, Louise; Pellicano, Elizabeth; Rhodes, Gillian – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
There are few direct examinations of whether face-processing difficulties in autism are disproportionate to difficulties with other complex non-face stimuli. Here we examined discrimination ability and memory for faces, cars, and inverted faces in children and adolescents with and without autism. Results showed that, relative to typical children,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Autism, Visual Stimuli, Visual Perception
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O'Connor, Eimear; McCormack, Teresa; Feeney, Aidan – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
In two experiments, 4- to 9-year-olds played a game in which they selected one of two boxes to win a prize. On "regret" trials the unchosen box contained a better prize than the prize children actually won, and on "baseline" trials the other box contained a prize of the same value. Children rated their feelings about their prize before and after…
Descriptors: Evidence, Children, Emotional Response, Experimental Psychology
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Badger, Julia R.; Shapiro, Laura R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
We examined whether inductive reasoning development is better characterized by accounts assuming an early category bias versus an early perceptual bias. We trained 264 children aged 3 to 9 years to categorize novel insects using a rule that directly pitted category membership against appearance. This was followed by an induction task with…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Classification, Children, Entomology
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Mondloch, Catherine J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
The current research investigated the influence of body posture on adults' and children's perception of facial displays of emotion. In each of two experiments, participants categorized facial expressions that were presented on a body posture that was congruent (e.g., a sad face on a body posing sadness) or incongruent (e.g., a sad face on a body…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Human Posture, Children, Adults
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Purser, Harry R. M.; Jarrold, Christopher – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Individuals with Down syndrome tend to have a marked impairment of verbal short-term memory. The chief aim of this study was to investigate whether phonemic discrimination contributes to this deficit. The secondary aim was to investigate whether phonological representations are degraded in verbal short-term memory in people with Down syndrome…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Control Groups, Phonemics, Down Syndrome
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O'Hearn, Kirsten; Franconeri, Steven; Wright, Catherine; Minshew, Nancy; Luna, Beatriz – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2013
Evidence suggests that people with autism rely less on holistic visual information than typical adults. The current studies examine this by investigating core visual processes that contribute to holistic processing--namely, individuation and element grouping--and how they develop in participants with autism and typically developing (TD)…
Descriptors: Autism, Visual Perception, Visual Discrimination, Visual Stimuli
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Liebal, Katja; Haun, Daniel B. M. – International Journal of Developmental Science, 2012
The aim of this essay is to elucidate the relevance of cross-species comparisons for the investigation of human behavior and its development. The focus is on the comparison of human children and another group of primates, the non-human great apes, with special attention to their cognitive skills. Integrating a comparative and developmental…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Comparative Analysis, Experimental Psychology, Thinking Skills
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Baltazar, Nicole C.; Shutts, Kristin; Kinzler, Katherine D. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Three experiments investigated whether a negativity bias in social perception extends to preschool-aged children's memory for the details of others' social actions and experiences. After learning about individuals who committed nice or mean social actions, children in Experiment 1 were more accurate at remembering who was mean compared with who…
Descriptors: Social Action, Social Cognition, Memory, Experiments
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Sumner, Emma; Connelly, Vincent; Barnett, Anna L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014
Current models of writing do not sufficiently address the complex relationship between the 2 transcription skills: spelling and handwriting. For children with dyslexia and beginning writers, it is conceivable that spelling ability will influence rate of handwriting production. Our aim in this study was to examine execution speed and temporal…
Descriptors: Spelling, Handwriting, Children, Dyslexia
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Rowland, Caroline F.; Chang, Franklin; Ambridge, Ben; Pine, Julian M.; Lieven, Elena V. M. – Cognition, 2012
Structural priming paradigms have been influential in shaping theories of adult sentence processing and theories of syntactic development. However, until recently there have been few attempts to provide an integrated account that explains both adult and developmental data. The aim of the present paper was to begin the process of integration by…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Sentences, Verbs
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Brown, Helen; Weighall, Anna; Henderson, Lisa M.; Gaskell, M. Gareth – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Recent studies of adults have found evidence for consolidation effects in the acquisition of novel words, but little is known about whether such effects are found developmentally. In two experiments, we familiarized children with novel nonwords (e.g., "biscal") and tested their recognition and recall of these items. In Experiment 1, 7-year-olds…
Descriptors: Evidence, Language Acquisition, Recall (Psychology), Experiments
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Howe, Christine; Tavares, Joana Taylor; Devine, Amy – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
Adults make erroneous predictions about object fall despite recognizing when observed displays are correct or incorrect. Prediction requires explicit engagement with conceptual knowledge, whereas recognition can be achieved through tacit processing. Therefore, it has been suggested that the greater challenge imposed by explicit engagement leads to…
Descriptors: Models, Prediction, Scientific Concepts, Program Effectiveness
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Le Sourn-Bissaoui, Sandrine; Caillies, Stephanie; Bernard, Stephane; Deleau, Michel; Brule, Lauriane – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that conversational perspective-taking is a determinant of unfamiliar ambiguous idiom comprehension. We investigated two types of ambiguous idiom, decomposable and nondecomposable expressions, which differ in the degree to which the literal meanings of the individual words contribute to the overall…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Tests, Language Skills, Research
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