Age judgments of human figures by children, ranging in age from 3 through 9 years, were investigated. The stimuli consisted of 4 different male figures drawn according to typical physical characteristics of the middle-aged adult, adolescent child, and infant. The figures were reproduced in 2 sizes and were matched in all possible pairings. Ss\u27 accuracy in age judgments increased steadily over the 7 age levels. The errors of young Ss were primarily due to a figural-size response set. Older Ss made increasing use of other physical features in making their judgments. Implications of these findings were discussed with references to the theoretical framework of Piaget
Ninety-six children, ages 5\u3e 6, and 7 responded to six Piagetian type story pairs that contrasted...
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether or not children\u27s attributions would vary as...
Purpose. This study collected data from eighty fictional books for children aged five to twelve that...
Age judgments of human figures by children, ranging in age from 3 through 9 years, were investigated...
Honors (Bachelor's)PsychologyUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/1...
This study investigated the development of children's understanding of representational change when ...
The introductory chapter provides a brief exploration of the history of childhood, and childhood rep...
This study was designed to investigate the development of object identity in infants at ages corresp...
Children (aged 6–10) and adults (total N = 136) completed a novel visual perspective-taking task tha...
This paper is a part of a broader research in the field of development of different intellectual abi...
This study investigated three lines of research and their interrelationship involving the developmen...
Two studies examined development of the ability to judge what another person is looking at. In Study...
The study was designed to investigate the impact of Piagetian Developmental level and grade on the a...
Humans are excellent at perceiving different features of the actions performed by others. For instan...
In order to test the hypothesis that recognition is a developmentally stable component of the memory...
Ninety-six children, ages 5\u3e 6, and 7 responded to six Piagetian type story pairs that contrasted...
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether or not children\u27s attributions would vary as...
Purpose. This study collected data from eighty fictional books for children aged five to twelve that...
Age judgments of human figures by children, ranging in age from 3 through 9 years, were investigated...
Honors (Bachelor's)PsychologyUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/1...
This study investigated the development of children's understanding of representational change when ...
The introductory chapter provides a brief exploration of the history of childhood, and childhood rep...
This study was designed to investigate the development of object identity in infants at ages corresp...
Children (aged 6–10) and adults (total N = 136) completed a novel visual perspective-taking task tha...
This paper is a part of a broader research in the field of development of different intellectual abi...
This study investigated three lines of research and their interrelationship involving the developmen...
Two studies examined development of the ability to judge what another person is looking at. In Study...
The study was designed to investigate the impact of Piagetian Developmental level and grade on the a...
Humans are excellent at perceiving different features of the actions performed by others. For instan...
In order to test the hypothesis that recognition is a developmentally stable component of the memory...
Ninety-six children, ages 5\u3e 6, and 7 responded to six Piagetian type story pairs that contrasted...
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether or not children\u27s attributions would vary as...
Purpose. This study collected data from eighty fictional books for children aged five to twelve that...