<div><p>Causal reasoning is an important aspect of scientific thinking. Even young human children can use causal reasoning to explain observations, make predictions, and design actions to bring about specific outcomes in the physical world. Weight is an interesting type of cause because it is an <i>invisible</i> property. Here, we tested preschool children with causal problem-solving tasks that assessed their understanding of weight. In an experimental setting, 2- to 5-year-old children completed three different tasks in which they had to use weight to produce physical effects—an object displacement task, a balance-scale task, and a tower-building task. The results showed that the children’s understanding of how to use object weight to prod...
As the history of science has documented, there is an important role for thought experiments in scie...
As adults, we have coherent, abstract, and highly structured causal representations of the world. We...
We examined how the strength of the size-weight illusion develops with age in typically developing c...
Causal reasoning is an important part of scientific thinking, and even young children can use causes...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06Our ability to plan actions, interpret other people...
How do children evaluate complex causal events? This study investigates preschoolers ’ representatio...
Previous studies (Case, 1985; Siegler, 1981) have shown that children under the age of 5 years have ...
Research on early physical reasoning has shown surprising discontinuities in developmental trajector...
Previous research had shown that 4-year-olds were likely to extend labels and internal properties of...
**Background**\ud \ud Children are not blank slates when they begin school; they bring prior concept...
The preschool years are an important time in the development of understanding the property of weight...
The literature has repeatedly shown that children believe in magic and can distinguish between fanta...
By 3 years of age, children can solve tasks involving physical principles such as locating a ball th...
Physical reasoning is the ability to go beyond the information in the immediate perceptual array. Fo...
Previous research has suggested that preschoolers possess a cognitive system that allows them to con...
As the history of science has documented, there is an important role for thought experiments in scie...
As adults, we have coherent, abstract, and highly structured causal representations of the world. We...
We examined how the strength of the size-weight illusion develops with age in typically developing c...
Causal reasoning is an important part of scientific thinking, and even young children can use causes...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06Our ability to plan actions, interpret other people...
How do children evaluate complex causal events? This study investigates preschoolers ’ representatio...
Previous studies (Case, 1985; Siegler, 1981) have shown that children under the age of 5 years have ...
Research on early physical reasoning has shown surprising discontinuities in developmental trajector...
Previous research had shown that 4-year-olds were likely to extend labels and internal properties of...
**Background**\ud \ud Children are not blank slates when they begin school; they bring prior concept...
The preschool years are an important time in the development of understanding the property of weight...
The literature has repeatedly shown that children believe in magic and can distinguish between fanta...
By 3 years of age, children can solve tasks involving physical principles such as locating a ball th...
Physical reasoning is the ability to go beyond the information in the immediate perceptual array. Fo...
Previous research has suggested that preschoolers possess a cognitive system that allows them to con...
As the history of science has documented, there is an important role for thought experiments in scie...
As adults, we have coherent, abstract, and highly structured causal representations of the world. We...
We examined how the strength of the size-weight illusion develops with age in typically developing c...