Preface |
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xvii | |
Acknowledgments |
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xxiii | |
About the Author |
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xxv | |
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Chapter 1 Introduction to Cognitive Development |
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1 | (28) |
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Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development |
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3 | (9) |
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3 | (1) |
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4 | (1) |
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4 | (1) |
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Structure, Function, and Development |
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5 | (1) |
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Developmental Function and Individual Differences |
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6 | (1) |
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The Adaptive Value of Cognitive Immaturity |
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7 | (1) |
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8 | (1) |
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8 | (1) |
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The Benefits of Thinking You're Better Than You Are |
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9 | (3) |
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Seven Truths of Cognitive Development |
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12 | (14) |
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Truth 1 Cognitive Development Proceeds as a Result of the Dynamic and Reciprocal Transaction of Internal and External Factors |
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13 | (2) |
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Truth 2 Cognitive Development Is Constructed Within a Social Context |
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15 | (1) |
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Sociocultural Perspectives |
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15 | (1) |
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16 | (1) |
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Truth 3 Cognitive Development Involves Both Stability and Plasticity Over Time |
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17 | (3) |
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Truth 4 Cognitive Development Involves Changes in the Way Information Is Represented |
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20 | (1) |
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Truth 5 Knowledge, or Knowledge Base, Has a Significant Influence on How Children Think |
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21 | (2) |
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Truth 6 Children Develop Increasing Intentional Control Over Their Behavior and Cognition |
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23 | (1) |
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Truth 7 Cognitive Development Involves Changes in Both Domain-General and Domain-Specific Abilities |
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24 | (2) |
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Goals of Cognitive Developmentalists |
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26 | (3) |
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Chapter 2 Biological Bases of Cognitive Development |
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29 | (46) |
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Evolution and Cognitive Development |
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31 | (9) |
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31 | (1) |
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Evolutionary Developmental Psychology |
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32 | (1) |
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Developmental Adaptations |
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33 | (2) |
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The Emergence of Adaptations and Evolved Probabilistic Cognitive Mechanisms |
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35 | (1) |
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36 | (2) |
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Biologically Primary and Biologically Secondary Abilities |
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38 | (2) |
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Models of Gene-Environment Interaction |
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40 | (11) |
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Developmental Systems Approach |
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41 | (1) |
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41 | (3) |
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44 | (3) |
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Genotype → Environment Theory |
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47 | (1) |
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Genotype → Environment Effects |
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48 | (3) |
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51 | (21) |
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54 | (1) |
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Proliferation, Migration, and Differentiation |
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55 | (1) |
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Synaptogenesis and Selective Cell Death |
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56 | (1) |
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Rises and Declines in Neural Development |
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57 | (1) |
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How Do Young Brains Get Hooked Up? |
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58 | (3) |
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Development of the Neocortex |
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61 | (3) |
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64 | (1) |
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64 | (2) |
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Recovery of Function From Brail) Damage |
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66 | (2) |
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Slow Growth and Plasticity |
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68 | (2) |
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Plasticity and Epigenetics |
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70 | (2) |
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Developmental Biology and Cognitive Development |
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72 | (3) |
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Chapter 3 The Social Construction of Mind |
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75 | (32) |
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Role of Culture in Cognitive Development |
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76 | (5) |
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Cognitive Development Is Inseparable From Its Cultural Context |
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76 | (2) |
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Vygotsky's Sociocultural Theory |
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78 | (3) |
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Cognitive Artifacts That Support and Extend Thinking: Tools of Intellectual Adaptation |
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81 | (7) |
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Language Names and Numeracy |
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82 | (3) |
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85 | (1) |
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Sociohistorical Influences |
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86 | (2) |
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Social Origins of Early Cognitive Competencies |
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88 | (16) |
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Studying Children in Natural Settings |
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89 | (2) |
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Zone of Proximal Development |
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91 | (2) |
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Apprenticeship in Thinking and Guided Participation |
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93 | (1) |
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94 | (2) |
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Reading and Talking to Children |
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96 | (3) |
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Playing With More Skilled Partners |
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99 | (1) |
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Socialization of Attention |
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100 | (1) |
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Cultural Influences on Guided Participation |
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100 | (4) |
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Sociocultural Theory and Cognitive Development |
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104 | (3) |
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Chapter 4 Infant Perception and Cognition |
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107 | (56) |
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Basic Perceptual Abilities of Young Infants |
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108 | (2) |
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Methodologies Used to Assess Infant Perception |
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110 | (5) |
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"This Sucks": Using Infant Sucking to Provide Insight Into Infant Perception |
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110 | (1) |
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Visual Preference Paradigm |
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111 | (1) |
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Habituation/Dishabituation Paradigm |
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112 | (3) |
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Development of Visual Perception |
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115 | (13) |
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115 | (2) |
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Development of Visual Preferences |
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117 | (1) |
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Physical Stimulus Characteristics |
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118 | (3) |
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Psychological Stimulus Characteristics |
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121 | (1) |
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Development of Face Processing |
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121 | (1) |
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Face Processing in Newborns |
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122 | (2) |
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Attention to Attractive Faces |
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124 | (1) |
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125 | (3) |
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128 | (4) |
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129 | (1) |
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130 | (2) |
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132 | (2) |
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132 | (1) |
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133 | (1) |
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134 | (6) |
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Perceptual Narrowing for Facial Discrimination |
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135 | (1) |
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Perceptual Narrowing in Speech Perception |
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136 | (2) |
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Perceptual Narrowing and Music |
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138 | (1) |
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Perceptual Narrowing Within Intersensory Integration |
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138 | (1) |
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Perceptual Narrowing as an Evolved Social-Cognitive Mechanism |
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139 | (1) |
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How Do We Know What Babies Know? The Violation-of-Expectation Method |
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140 | (1) |
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141 | (19) |
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143 | (1) |
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143 | (2) |
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Object Cohesion and Continuity |
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145 | (4) |
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149 | (5) |
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154 | (1) |
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155 | (2) |
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157 | (1) |
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Arguments Against Core Knowledge |
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158 | (2) |
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What Is Infant Cognition Made Of? |
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160 | (3) |
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Chapter 5 Thinking in Symbols |
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163 | (50) |
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164 | (6) |
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Young Children's Interpretation of Pictures and Models |
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164 | (3) |
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Appearance/Reality Distinction |
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167 | (3) |
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170 | (28) |
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Some Assumptions of Piaget's Theory |
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170 | (2) |
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172 | (1) |
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173 | (2) |
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175 | (1) |
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176 | (4) |
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Development of Operations |
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180 | (11) |
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Culture and Symbolic Development |
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191 | (1) |
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State of Piaget's Theory Today |
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192 | (6) |
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Theory Theories of Cognitive Development |
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198 | (6) |
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Theory Theorists as the Inheritors of Piaget's Tradition |
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198 | (1) |
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Understanding the Biological World |
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199 | (1) |
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200 | (1) |
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What Young Children Know and Don't Know About Biology |
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201 | (3) |
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Everyday Expressions of the Symbolic Function |
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204 | (7) |
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204 | (2) |
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Distinguishing Between Fantasy and Reality |
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206 | (5) |
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211 | (2) |
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Chapter 6 Learning to Think on Their Own |
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213 | (46) |
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Assumptions of Information-Processing Approaches |
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214 | (20) |
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Development of Basic-Level Processes: Executive Function |
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217 | (1) |
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218 | (1) |
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Memory Span and Working Memory |
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219 | (1) |
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Age Differences in Memory Span and the Span of Apprehension |
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220 | (1) |
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Development of Working Memory |
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221 | (3) |
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Learning How Not to Respond: Inhibition and Resistance to Interference |
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224 | (1) |
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Developmental Differences |
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225 | (1) |
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Inhibition and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder |
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226 | (1) |
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227 | (2) |
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Executive Function, Self-Control, and "Hot" EF |
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229 | (1) |
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Executive Function and Brain Development |
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230 | (1) |
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Final Thoughts on Executive Function |
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231 | (3) |
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Development of Strategies |
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234 | (25) |
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Increases in Strategy Use, Improvements in Performance |
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234 | (1) |
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235 | (2) |
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How Do Children's Strategies Develop? |
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237 | (2) |
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Development of Memory Strategies |
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239 | (1) |
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239 | (2) |
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241 | (1) |
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Longitudinal Assessment of Memory Strategy Development |
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242 | (1) |
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243 | (1) |
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Factors That Influence Children's Strategy Use and Effectiveness |
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244 | (1) |
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244 | (2) |
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246 | (2) |
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248 | (4) |
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Transactions Among Capacity, Knowledge, and Metacognition |
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252 | (1) |
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Culture and Strategies in the Classroom |
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253 | (6) |
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Chapter 7 Memory Development |
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259 | (48) |
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Representation of Knowledge |
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261 | (2) |
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Memory Development in Infancy |
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263 | (10) |
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Preference for Novelty as an Indication of Memory |
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263 | (2) |
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265 | (4) |
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Deferred Imitation as a Measure of Memory |
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269 | (1) |
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Neuroloqical Basis of Infant Memory |
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270 | (3) |
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273 | (5) |
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274 | (1) |
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Why Can't We Remember Events From Infancy and Early Childhood? |
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275 | (3) |
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278 | (2) |
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Development of Event Memory |
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280 | (6) |
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281 | (2) |
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Role of Parents in "Teaching" Children to Remember |
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283 | (3) |
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286 | (17) |
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Age Differences in Children's Eyewitness Memories |
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288 | (1) |
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How Much Do Children Remember, and How Accurate Are They? |
|
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289 | (1) |
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How Long Do Memories Last? |
|
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290 | (1) |
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Factors Influencing Children's Eyewitness Memory |
|
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290 | (4) |
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Age Differences in Suggestibility |
|
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294 | (2) |
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How Do Children Respond to Misleading Questions? |
|
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296 | (3) |
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299 | (2) |
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Final Thoughts on Children as Eyewitnesses |
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301 | (2) |
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303 | (4) |
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Chapter 8 Problem Solving and Reasoning |
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307 | (50) |
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308 | (11) |
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The Development of Problem Solving |
|
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308 | (3) |
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Problem Solving as Inducing and Using Rules V |
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311 | (1) |
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When Can Children Induce Rules? |
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312 | (1) |
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313 | (1) |
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314 | (5) |
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319 | (9) |
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Object Exploration and Object-Oriented Play |
|
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319 | (2) |
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Relationship Between Tool Use and Object-Oriented Play |
|
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321 | (1) |
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Development of Tool Use in Young Children |
|
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321 | (3) |
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324 | (2) |
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326 | (2) |
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328 | (15) |
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328 | (3) |
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Factors Affecting Children's Analogical Reasoning |
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331 | (2) |
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333 | (1) |
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333 | (4) |
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The Role of Play in Causal Learning |
|
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337 | (1) |
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338 | (5) |
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Development of Spatial Cognition |
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343 | (14) |
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344 | (2) |
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346 | (1) |
|
Object and Location Memory |
|
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347 | (1) |
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The Relation Between Spatial Cognition and Mathematics and Science Achievement |
|
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348 | (1) |
|
Sex Differences in Spatial Cognition |
|
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348 | (2) |
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Origins of Sex Differences in Spatial Cognition |
|
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350 | (2) |
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The Complicated Relation Between Sex Differences in Spatial Abilities and Sex Differences in Mathematics and Choosing STEM Professions |
|
|
352 | (5) |
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Chapter 9 Language Development |
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357 | (48) |
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358 | (2) |
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Describing Children's Language Development |
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360 | (16) |
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360 | (2) |
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Morphological Development |
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362 | (2) |
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364 | (2) |
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366 | (1) |
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366 | (1) |
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367 | (1) |
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367 | (1) |
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367 | (2) |
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Constraints on Word Learning |
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369 | (2) |
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Overextensions and Underextensions |
|
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371 | (1) |
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372 | (1) |
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Communication and Egocentrism |
|
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373 | (1) |
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373 | (3) |
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Some Theoretical Perspectives of Language Development |
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376 | (19) |
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Nativist Perspectives on Language Development |
|
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379 | (2) |
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Language and Brain Development |
|
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381 | (2) |
|
Universal Grammar and Language Development |
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383 | (2) |
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Is There a Critical Period for Learning Language? |
|
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385 | (3) |
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Social-Interactionist Perspectives of Language Development |
|
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388 | (1) |
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Emergence of Communicative Intentions |
|
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389 | (1) |
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Gesfures and Language Development |
|
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390 | (1) |
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391 | (4) |
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Effects of Socioeconomic Status on Language Development |
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395 | (2) |
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Bilingualism and Second-Language Learning |
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397 | (4) |
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Bilingualism and Executive Function |
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398 | (1) |
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Factors Affecting Learning a Second Language |
|
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399 | (2) |
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401 | (4) |
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Chapter 10 Social Cognition |
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405 | (62) |
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Basic Social-Cognitive Abilities Underlying Social Cognition |
|
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407 | (3) |
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Early Orienting to Social Others |
|
|
408 | (1) |
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Treating Others as Intentional Agents |
|
|
408 | (2) |
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Tomasello's Shared Intentionality Theory |
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410 | (10) |
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412 | (1) |
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412 | (2) |
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414 | (1) |
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Group Mindedness and "Promiscuous Normativity" |
|
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415 | (2) |
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417 | (3) |
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Developing a Theory of Mind |
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420 | (16) |
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Development of Mind Reading |
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421 | (1) |
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421 | (4) |
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Factors Related to False-Belief Performance |
|
|
425 | (1) |
|
The Emergence of Theory of Mind Over Infancy and Early Childhood |
|
|
426 | (3) |
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Theory of Mind Beyond "Sally-Anne" |
|
|
429 | (3) |
|
Theory of Mind in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder |
|
|
432 | (1) |
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|
433 | (1) |
|
Finalism, Promiscuous Teleology, and Artificialism |
|
|
433 | (1) |
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Children as Intuitive Theists |
|
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434 | (2) |
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|
436 | (12) |
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437 | (2) |
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Age Differences in Social Learning |
|
|
439 | (1) |
|
Social Learning in Infancy |
|
|
439 | (1) |
|
Young Children as Imitators and Emulators |
|
|
440 | (1) |
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441 | (2) |
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Children as Models for Social Learning |
|
|
443 | (2) |
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Mirror Neurons: The Foundation of Social Learning? |
|
|
445 | (3) |
|
Development of a Concept of Self |
|
|
448 | (3) |
|
Cognitive Bases of Gender Identity |
|
|
451 | (13) |
|
|
451 | (1) |
|
Development of Gender Constancy |
|
|
451 | (2) |
|
Consequences of Gender Constancy for Gender Identification |
|
|
453 | (2) |
|
|
455 | (4) |
|
Gender Cognition in Transgender Children |
|
|
459 | (2) |
|
Children's Theories of Gender |
|
|
461 | (3) |
|
How Special Is Social Cognition? |
|
|
464 | (3) |
|
Chapter 11 Schooling and Cognitive Development |
|
|
467 | (58) |
|
Development of Reading Skills |
|
|
468 | (17) |
|
Overview of Learning to Read |
|
|
468 | (1) |
|
Stages of Learning to Read |
|
|
468 | (1) |
|
|
469 | (3) |
|
Cognitive Development and Reading |
|
|
472 | (1) |
|
|
472 | (1) |
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|
473 | (1) |
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|
474 | (1) |
|
|
474 | (4) |
|
|
478 | (1) |
|
Sex Differences in Reading and Verbal Abilities |
|
|
478 | (7) |
|
Children's Number and Arithmetic Concepts |
|
|
485 | (22) |
|
Integrative Theory of Numerical Development |
|
|
486 | (2) |
|
Development of Conceptual and Procedural Mathematical Knowledge |
|
|
488 | (1) |
|
|
488 | (2) |
|
|
490 | (2) |
|
Development of Arithmetic Strategies |
|
|
492 | (5) |
|
Variations in Developing Mathematical Proficiency: Math Disabilities, Cultural Differences, and Sex Differences |
|
|
497 | (1) |
|
|
498 | (1) |
|
|
499 | (3) |
|
|
502 | (5) |
|
Schooling and Cognitive Development |
|
|
507 | (4) |
|
Schooling Versus Age Effects on Intelligence |
|
|
508 | (1) |
|
Effect of Schooling on IQ |
|
|
509 | (2) |
|
Evolutionary Educational Psychology |
|
|
511 | (14) |
|
Principles of Evolutionary Educational Psychology |
|
|
513 | (3) |
|
Costs and Benefits of Academic Preschools |
|
|
516 | (2) |
|
"Educational" DVDs and Videos for Infants |
|
|
518 | (2) |
|
|
520 | (5) |
|
Chapter 12 Approaches to the Study of Intelligence |
|
|
525 | (46) |
|
|
525 | (2) |
|
Psychometric Approach to the Study of Intelligence |
|
|
527 | (14) |
|
|
527 | (1) |
|
General Intelligence, org |
|
|
527 | (3) |
|
Hierarchical Model of Cognitive Abilities |
|
|
530 | (1) |
|
|
530 | (5) |
|
|
535 | (1) |
|
IQ Tests and Cultural Minority Groups |
|
|
536 | (5) |
|
Information-Processing Approaches to the Study of Intelligence |
|
|
541 | (11) |
|
|
542 | (1) |
|
Speed of Information Processing |
|
|
543 | (1) |
|
Working Memory and Executive Function |
|
|
544 | (2) |
|
Higher-Order Cognitive Abilities |
|
|
546 | (1) |
|
|
547 | (2) |
|
|
549 | (2) |
|
|
551 | (1) |
|
Sternberg's Theory of Adaptive Intelligence |
|
|
552 | (8) |
|
|
554 | (1) |
|
|
555 | (1) |
|
|
556 | (1) |
|
Theory of Adaptive Intelligence Goes to School |
|
|
557 | (3) |
|
Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences |
|
|
560 | (8) |
|
Criteria of an Intelligence |
|
|
563 | (1) |
|
Potential Isolation by Brain Damage |
|
|
563 | (1) |
|
Existence of Savants and Prodigies |
|
|
563 | (1) |
|
Identifiable Core Operation or Set of Operations |
|
|
564 | (1) |
|
Distinctive Developmental History, Along With a Definable Set of Expert End-State Performances |
|
|
564 | (1) |
|
Evolutionary History and Evolutionary Plausibility |
|
|
565 | (1) |
|
Support From Experimental Psychological Tasks and From Psychometric Findings |
|
|
565 | (1) |
|
Susceptibility to Encoding in a System |
|
|
565 | (1) |
|
Multiple Intelligences and Education |
|
|
565 | (1) |
|
Is Gardner's Theory a Theory of Intelligence? |
|
|
566 | (2) |
|
|
568 | (3) |
|
Chapter 13 Origins, Modification, and Stability of Intellectual Differences |
|
|
571 | (50) |
|
Transactional Approach to the Study of Intelligence |
|
|
573 | (3) |
|
Behavioral Genetics and the Heritability of Intelligence |
|
|
576 | (11) |
|
|
576 | (2) |
|
Elementary Cognitive Tasks and Intelligence |
|
|
578 | (2) |
|
Familial Studies of Intelligence |
|
|
580 | (1) |
|
Role of the Environment in Behavioral Genetics Analyses |
|
|
581 | (2) |
|
Means Versus Correlations |
|
|
583 | (1) |
|
The Scarr-Rowe Hypothesis |
|
|
584 | (3) |
|
Experience and Intelligence |
|
|
587 | (22) |
|
Establishing Intellectual Competence |
|
|
588 | (1) |
|
Institutionalization Studies |
|
|
588 | (2) |
|
Home Environment: Naturalistic Studies of Parent-Child Interaction |
|
|
590 | (2) |
|
Children at Risk: The Effect of Socioeconomic Status and Adverse Childhood Experiences on Intelligence and Cognitive Development |
|
|
592 | (4) |
|
Life History Theory and the Possibility of Hidden Talents |
|
|
596 | (3) |
|
|
599 | (1) |
|
Modification and Maintenance of Intellectual Functioning |
|
|
599 | (1) |
|
Modification of Intellectual Impairment Caused by Early Experience |
|
|
600 | (4) |
|
Compensatory Education Programs |
|
|
604 | (1) |
|
Maintenance of the Beneficial Effects of Early Experience on Intelligence |
|
|
605 | (3) |
|
How Modifiable Is Human Intelligence? |
|
|
608 | (1) |
|
Stability of Intelligence |
|
|
609 | (12) |
|
|
610 | (1) |
|
Predicting Later Intelligence From Tests in Infancy |
|
|
610 | (4) |
|
Stability of IQ Scores During Childhood |
|
|
614 | (2) |
|
Are People Getting Smarter? The Flynn Effect |
|
|
616 | (5) |
Glossary |
|
621 | (20) |
References |
|
641 | (122) |
Index |
|
763 | |