Search results for "Cognitive development"

showing 10 items of 97 documents

A cluster randomized web-based intervention trial to reduce food neophobia and promote healthy diets among one-year-old children in kindergarten: stu…

2018

A child’s first years of life are crucial for cognitive development and future health. Studies show that a varied diet with a high intake of vegetables is positive for both weight and cognitive development. The present low intake of vegetables in children’s diets is therefore a concern. Food neophobia can be a barrier for vegetable intake in children. Our hypothesis is that interventions that can increase children’s intake of vegetables should be introduced early in life to overcome children’s neophobia. This study aims to develop, measure and compare the effect of two different interventions among one-year-old children in kindergartens to reduce food neophobia and promote healthy diets. Th…

0301 basic medicineGerontologyParentsParental feeding practicesPsychological interventionOverweightDiet varietyKindergarten03 medical and health sciencesFood PreferencesStudy ProtocolCognitionFood neophobiaIntervention (counseling)Surveys and QuestionnairesVegetablesCognitive developmentMedicineHumansHealth EducationChildrenMealInternet030109 nutrition & dieteticsbusiness.industryNeophobialcsh:RJ1-570InfantCognitionlcsh:PediatricsOverweightSensory educationmedicine.diseaseSapere methodPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthInfant BehaviorEducational PersonnelCognitive developmentHealth educationmedicine.symptomDiet HealthybusinessBMC Pediatrics
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2017

Children’s improved performance with age in analogy tasks has been explained by an increase in semantic knowledge of the items and the relations between them or by the development of an increased ability to inhibit irrelevant information. We tested the so-called "unbalanced attentional focus hypothesis" that claims that a failure to choose the "analogical" match can be the result of a difficulty to focus on all the relevant information available. Previous eye-tracking research has suggested, in analogies of the A:B::C:D format, that 5-6 year-olds organize their search around the C item. They focused significantly less than adults on the A:B pair, thereby hindering their discovering the rela…

05 social sciencesAnalogyExecutive functionsAffect (psychology)050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)Focus (linguistics)Cognitive developmentSemantic memory0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologySocial psychologyGeneral Psychology050104 developmental & child psychologyCognitive psychologyInformation integrationFrontiers in Psychology
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Smart Pedagogy for Technology-Enhanced Learning

2018

The progress of technology has raised challenges to the educational environment, so it is necessary to search for answers to the questions: How can one teach better? How can one scaffold the student in the learning process? What kind of competencies should be developed? What competencies do teachers need? What kind of technology should be used or not be used? This chapter analyses the role of pedagogy for education and outlines the risks for cognitive development that may result from the introduction of technology without an understanding of pedagogical principles. These risks are defined as a centrifugal effect that can be mitigated by integrating technology into the educational process us…

0508 media and communicationsComputer scienceProcess (engineering)05 social sciencesPedagogyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONCognitive development050301 education050801 communication & media studies0503 education
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Twenty-first-century preschool bilingual education: facing advantages and challenges in cross-cultural contexts

2016

Early childhood is a critical period in a child’s intensive social, emotional, linguistic and cognitive development, and preschool serves as the first transitional step from home to the wider socia...

060201 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageBilingual educationTwenty-First Centuryearly childhood bilingualismta612106 humanities and the artsLanguage and LinguisticsEducationDevelopmental psychologybilingual education0602 languages and literatureCognitive developmentCross-culturalta516preschool educationEarly childhoodPsychologyPeriod (music)International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
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Content and context effects in children's and adults' conditional reasoning

2002

We have recently shown that children interpret conditional sentences with binary terms (e.g., male/female) in both the antecedent and the consequent as biconditionals (Barrouillet & Lecas, 1998). We hypothesized that the same effect can be obtained with conditionals that do not contain binary terms provided that they are embedded in a context that restricts to only two the possible values on both the antecedent and the consequent. In the present experiment, we asked 12-year-old children, 15-year-old children, and adults to draw conclusions from conditional syllogisms that involved three types of conditional sentence: (1) conditionals with binary terms (BB), (2) conditionals with non-bi…

AdultAdolescentAntecedent (logic)Context effect05 social sciencesSyllogism050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)CognitionModels Psychological050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyRandom AllocationConditional sentenceLogical biconditionalCognitive developmentHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildPsychologyProblem SolvingGeneral PsychologyThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
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Developmental and content effects in reasoning with causal conditionals.

2002

Abstract Two predictions derived from Markovits and Barrouillet's (2001) developmental model of conditional reasoning were tested in a study in which 72 twelve-year-olds, 80 fifteen-year-olds, and 104 adults received a paper-and-pencil test of conditional reasoning with causal premises (“if cause P then effect Q”). First, we predicted that conditional premises would induce more correct uncertainty responses to the Affirmation of the consequent and Denial of the antecedent forms when the antecedent term is weakly associated to the consequent than when the two are strongly associated and that this effect would decrease with age. Second, uncertainty responding to the Denial of the antecedent f…

AdultDeductive reasoningAdolescentAntecedent (logic)media_common.quotation_subjectConcept FormationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionModels PsychologicalCausalityTerm (time)CausalityDenialChild DevelopmentCognitionPremiseDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansPsychologyChildSocial psychologyProblem SolvingCognitive psychologymedia_commonJournal of experimental child psychology
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Parents and their children's school lives--commentary on the special issue, 'Parents' role in children's school lives'.

2014

Although it is teachers who play the key role in supporting children’s learning and theiracademicdevelopmentatschool,parentstoocanbeinvolvedintheirchildren’sacademiclives in many different ways. As the vast majority of parents consider academicachievement and adjustment to be important for their children’s future, parents oftenmake an effort to support their children’s learning, such as helping them with theirhomework. Many kinds of parental involvement have been described in the literature,although not all of them have been shown to be effective in promoting children’sacademic development (Chen & Stevenson, 1989; Cooper, Lindsay, & Nye, 2000; Fan CLevinet al.,1997;Patall,Cooper,RPomerantz,…

AdultEmotional supportSchoolsParentingCognitive engagementmedia_common.quotation_subjectErikson's stages of psychosocial developmentCognitionAcademic achievementAchievementEducationDevelopmental psychologyChild DevelopmentPerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansta516Parent-Child RelationsPsychologyChildStudentsCompetence (human resources)Social psychologymedia_commonThe British journal of educational psychology
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El rol de la clase social, la educación y el desempleo parentales en el desarrollo cognitivo infantil

2018

Objective: Assessing the association between socioeconomic gradient and cognitive development among children of a Spanish birth cohort aged 5-6 years from a gender perspective. Method: Cognitive development was assessed on 525 children aged 5-6 years in the INMA-Valencia cohort, with the Global Cognitive Score (GCS) from McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities. Information on social class, education level and employment was collected for both parents in addition to other sociodemographic factors, parental, family and child characteristics. The relationship between maternal and paternal socioeconomic gradient and cognitive development was assessed by linear regressions and comparing the vari…

AdultEmploymentMaleParental educationmedia_common.quotation_subjectIntelligenceMothersSocial classGender perspectiveDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesFathers0302 clinical medicineChild DevelopmentCognitionSex FactorsEducación parentalDesarrollo cognitivoCognitive developmentHumans030212 general & internal medicineAssociation (psychology)ChildSocioeconomic statusChildrenmedia_commonPerspectiva de género030503 health policy & serviceslcsh:Public aspects of medicinePublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthlcsh:RA1-1270Explained variationGradiente socioeconómicoChild developmentSocial ClassSocioeconomic FactorsUnemploymentChild PreschoolCohortUnemploymentCognitive developmentFemaleInfancia0305 other medical sciencePsychologyMaternal AgeSocio-economic gradient
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Conditional reasoning by mental models: chronometric and developmental evidence

2000

The aim of this article is to verify two predictions resulting from the mental models theory of conditional reasoning. First, the denial of antecedent (DA) and modus tollens (MT) inferences should take longer to verify than modus ponens (MP) and affirmation of consequent (AC) because the former require subjects to flesh out the initial model whereas the latter do not. This prediction was confirmed in two reaction time experiments in adults. In line with Evans' proposal (Evans, J. St. B. T. (1993). The mental model theory of conditional reasoning: critical appraisal and revision. Cognition, 48, 1-20), there was a strong directionality effect: inferences from antecedent to consequent (MP and …

AdultLinguistics and LanguageAdolescentAntecedent (logic)Cognitive NeuroscienceInferenceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionConditional reasoningLanguage and LinguisticsModus tollensCognitionReaction TimeDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansChildPsychological TheoryConstruct (philosophy)PsychologyModus ponensSocial psychologyCognitive psychologyCognition
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Does the Coordination of Verbal and Motor Information Explain the Development of Counting in Children?

2001

Counting is often considered to be the coordination of two actions: saying the number-words and pointing to each object. We report three experiments to test the hypothesis that this coordination requires the use of the central executive (A. D. Baddeley, 1990), and that the cost of coordination decreases with age. Participants were 5- and 9-year-old children and adults. At all ages tested, the manipulation of the difficulty of each component affected counting performance but did not make coordination more difficult. These results suggest that, at least from the age 5, counting is a procedure in which the control of coordination is not attention demanding.

AdultMaleConcept FormationMotion PerceptionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDevelopmental psychologyRandom AllocationCognitionConcept learningReaction TimeDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansMotion perceptionChildControl (linguistics)Verbal BehaviorWorking memoryAge FactorsCognitionTest (assessment)Language developmentChild PreschoolFemalePsychologyMathematicsJournal of Experimental Child Psychology
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