This paper presents two experiments to support the general hypothesis that the coordination of actions between individuals promotes the acquisition of cognitive coordinations. The first experiment shows that two children, working together, can successfully perform a task involving spatial coordinations; children of the same age, working alone, are not capable of performing the task. The second experiment shows that subjects who did not possess certain cognitive operations involved in Piaget's conservation of liquids task acquire these operations after having actualized them in a social coordination task
This paper deals with the role of peer interaction in cognitive development from the perspective of ...
Interpersonal coordination broadly captures the ways in which interacting individuals become more si...
The main goal of the research was to study how children develop new competencies within social inter...
The aim of this study was to re-examine the hypotheses of Mugny & Doise (1978). Seventy-seven presch...
In recent years there has been a growing research interest in the social nature of knowledge (e.g. D...
A great deal of research underlines the beneficial conse-quences of social interactions on learning ...
Investigating the impact of school-age children’s ToM (declarative knowledge) on the way they intera...
The ability to act jointly with others is a hallmark of primate evolution and is fundamental for hum...
This thesis is concerned with the importance of social factors in cognitive development: specificall...
While increasingly taken to refer to the anatomy and physiology of brain processes, the cognitive sk...
According to Siegal’s hypothesis, despite having concrete operational abilities some children are no...
Factors which may play a role in regulating cognitive interaction, and thereby help determine the co...
Background. A Vygotskian framework links cognitive change to collaborative interaction with a more ...
In a recent model of cognitive development, Karmiloff-Smith (1992) alerts us to levels of cognitive ...
Our research dealt with the role of independent construction of formal operations and asymmetric pee...
This paper deals with the role of peer interaction in cognitive development from the perspective of ...
Interpersonal coordination broadly captures the ways in which interacting individuals become more si...
The main goal of the research was to study how children develop new competencies within social inter...
The aim of this study was to re-examine the hypotheses of Mugny & Doise (1978). Seventy-seven presch...
In recent years there has been a growing research interest in the social nature of knowledge (e.g. D...
A great deal of research underlines the beneficial conse-quences of social interactions on learning ...
Investigating the impact of school-age children’s ToM (declarative knowledge) on the way they intera...
The ability to act jointly with others is a hallmark of primate evolution and is fundamental for hum...
This thesis is concerned with the importance of social factors in cognitive development: specificall...
While increasingly taken to refer to the anatomy and physiology of brain processes, the cognitive sk...
According to Siegal’s hypothesis, despite having concrete operational abilities some children are no...
Factors which may play a role in regulating cognitive interaction, and thereby help determine the co...
Background. A Vygotskian framework links cognitive change to collaborative interaction with a more ...
In a recent model of cognitive development, Karmiloff-Smith (1992) alerts us to levels of cognitive ...
Our research dealt with the role of independent construction of formal operations and asymmetric pee...
This paper deals with the role of peer interaction in cognitive development from the perspective of ...
Interpersonal coordination broadly captures the ways in which interacting individuals become more si...
The main goal of the research was to study how children develop new competencies within social inter...