An experiment investigated the effect of a make-believe fantasy mode of problem presentation on reasoning about valid conditional syllogisms in three groups of 5-year-old children: a) school children from middle-class families in England; b) school children from middle-class families in Brazil; and, c) children from low SES families in Brazil who had never gone to school. Previous investigations had reported that the use of a fantasy context elicited significantly more logically appropriate responses from school children than did other contexts, and that children with school experiences made significantly more logically appropriate responses than did children without school experience. The present investigation extended these findings...
Previous research with adults suggests that a catalog of minimally counterintuitive concepts, which ...
The study described here applied knowledge about inference-making from the logical reasoning literat...
Preschoolers often appear to not understand the logical relationships expressed by words like “or”, ...
When 4- and 6-year-olds are cued to use their imagination, they can overcome the belief bias effect ...
The study examines the relationship between the development of logical processes required in deducti...
In this paper, two studies are reported in which children’s ability to distinguish reality from fant...
Reasoning about problems with empirically false content can be hard, as the inferences that people d...
The present study focuses on children\u27s developing ability to categorize real and pretend events,...
Theorists examining children’s understanding of the mind have been particularly interested in preten...
This paper analyzes if pre-schoolers can distinguish fantasy from reality and what factors influence...
The article examines the relationship between the level of formation of verbal and logical operation...
As habilidades do raciocínio silogístico usadas para alcançar conclusões e detectar incoerência em t...
Purpose. This study was an attempt to determine the developmental results of four through six grade ...
This experiment investigates whether engaging in pretense may prompt preschool-aged children to reas...
Operant magical thinking (belief that thought can significantly alter reality) and reading comprehen...
Previous research with adults suggests that a catalog of minimally counterintuitive concepts, which ...
The study described here applied knowledge about inference-making from the logical reasoning literat...
Preschoolers often appear to not understand the logical relationships expressed by words like “or”, ...
When 4- and 6-year-olds are cued to use their imagination, they can overcome the belief bias effect ...
The study examines the relationship between the development of logical processes required in deducti...
In this paper, two studies are reported in which children’s ability to distinguish reality from fant...
Reasoning about problems with empirically false content can be hard, as the inferences that people d...
The present study focuses on children\u27s developing ability to categorize real and pretend events,...
Theorists examining children’s understanding of the mind have been particularly interested in preten...
This paper analyzes if pre-schoolers can distinguish fantasy from reality and what factors influence...
The article examines the relationship between the level of formation of verbal and logical operation...
As habilidades do raciocínio silogístico usadas para alcançar conclusões e detectar incoerência em t...
Purpose. This study was an attempt to determine the developmental results of four through six grade ...
This experiment investigates whether engaging in pretense may prompt preschool-aged children to reas...
Operant magical thinking (belief that thought can significantly alter reality) and reading comprehen...
Previous research with adults suggests that a catalog of minimally counterintuitive concepts, which ...
The study described here applied knowledge about inference-making from the logical reasoning literat...
Preschoolers often appear to not understand the logical relationships expressed by words like “or”, ...