The use and understanding of ordinal terms (e.g., “first” and “second”) is a developmental milestone that has been relatively unexplored in the preschool age range. In the present study, 4- and 5-year-olds watched as a reward was placed in one of three train cars labeled by the experimenter with an ordinal (e.g., first car), color (e.g., brown car), or generic label (e.g., that car). Results revealed that 4-year-olds actually had more difficulty retrieving the reward once occluded under identical tunnels when they were provided with ordinal labels compared to color and generic labels. Search performance improved with age and showed dramatic growth in the ordinal-label condition from 4 to 5 years of age. Results are discussed with regard to ...
To identify the role of the child's own action in the development of the ability to coordinate ...
The development of spatial navigation in children depends not only on remembering which landmarks le...
Within a perception-action framework, exploration is seen as a driving force in young children's dev...
The use and understanding of ordinal terms (e.g., “first” and “second”) is a developmental milestone...
Preschool children demonstrate rapid gains in conceptual understanding and language comprehension. U...
Language is an important aspect of child development. When it comes to numbers, children first learn...
Language is an important aspect of child development. Cardinal number words such as one, two, and th...
Young children are limited in their usage of comparative adjectives and ordinal numbers, typical way...
During the preschool years, children are simultaneously undergoing a reshaping of their mental numbe...
Francis Galton first reported that humans mentally organize numbers from left to right on a mental n...
We studied the acquisition of the ordinal meaning of number words and examined its development relat...
Piaget and Inhelder (1956) claimed that children were unable to coordinate orthogonal spatial dimens...
Organizing locations into a systematic figure was predicted to facilitate children's use of spa...
The ordinal position effect (OPE) refers to the tendency to categorize items from the beginning/end ...
Children’s knowledge of the ordinal relations among number symbols is related to their mathematical ...
To identify the role of the child's own action in the development of the ability to coordinate ...
The development of spatial navigation in children depends not only on remembering which landmarks le...
Within a perception-action framework, exploration is seen as a driving force in young children's dev...
The use and understanding of ordinal terms (e.g., “first” and “second”) is a developmental milestone...
Preschool children demonstrate rapid gains in conceptual understanding and language comprehension. U...
Language is an important aspect of child development. When it comes to numbers, children first learn...
Language is an important aspect of child development. Cardinal number words such as one, two, and th...
Young children are limited in their usage of comparative adjectives and ordinal numbers, typical way...
During the preschool years, children are simultaneously undergoing a reshaping of their mental numbe...
Francis Galton first reported that humans mentally organize numbers from left to right on a mental n...
We studied the acquisition of the ordinal meaning of number words and examined its development relat...
Piaget and Inhelder (1956) claimed that children were unable to coordinate orthogonal spatial dimens...
Organizing locations into a systematic figure was predicted to facilitate children's use of spa...
The ordinal position effect (OPE) refers to the tendency to categorize items from the beginning/end ...
Children’s knowledge of the ordinal relations among number symbols is related to their mathematical ...
To identify the role of the child's own action in the development of the ability to coordinate ...
The development of spatial navigation in children depends not only on remembering which landmarks le...
Within a perception-action framework, exploration is seen as a driving force in young children's dev...