Previous methodologies used to investigate future thinking (i.e., one-step “spoon test”) do not directly assess temporal reasoning. Consequently, the extent to which foresight is required to solve these tasks has been questioned. In the current study, 3-, 4- and 5-year-olds were presented with atwo-step“spoon test”: to secure a future need (e.g., play with a marble run game), childrenfirsthad to obtain a key that allowed themnextto access the marbles. By the age of 4 children selected the key; however, it is only by the age of 5 that children reasoned about the temporal sequence of future eventsandselected the key. Temporal reasoning, memory for the past events and age significantly contributed to predict children&rs...
In this paper, we shall use Tulving's seminal empirical and theoretical research including the 'Spoo...
Six experiments examined children's ability to make inferences using temporal order information. Chi...
The current study examined the impact of psychological distance on children's performance on the pre...
Previous methodologies used to investigate future thinking (i.e., one-step “spoon test”)...
KLD was funded by a Bobby Jones scholarship and by the University of St Andrews.Imagining the future...
Episodic future thinking (EFT) is the ability to pre-experience a future event. Previous studies dem...
Much of humans' success rests on foresight, the ability to predict what will happen or what is neede...
Between 3 and 5 years of age children develop the ability to plan for their own and others' future n...
The capacity to plan ahead and provide the means for future ends is an important part of human pract...
This research looked at young children's ability to reason about the causal relations between events...
The aim of this dissertation was to develop a novel behavioural method to assess young children’s ca...
The ability to think about and plan for the future is a critical cognitive skill for our daily life....
The current study examined 3‐ and 7‐year‐olds' performance on two types of episodic foresight tasks:...
Four experiments examined children's ability to reason about the causal significance of the order in...
Previous experiments have demonstrated that by four years of age children can use information from a...
In this paper, we shall use Tulving's seminal empirical and theoretical research including the 'Spoo...
Six experiments examined children's ability to make inferences using temporal order information. Chi...
The current study examined the impact of psychological distance on children's performance on the pre...
Previous methodologies used to investigate future thinking (i.e., one-step “spoon test”)...
KLD was funded by a Bobby Jones scholarship and by the University of St Andrews.Imagining the future...
Episodic future thinking (EFT) is the ability to pre-experience a future event. Previous studies dem...
Much of humans' success rests on foresight, the ability to predict what will happen or what is neede...
Between 3 and 5 years of age children develop the ability to plan for their own and others' future n...
The capacity to plan ahead and provide the means for future ends is an important part of human pract...
This research looked at young children's ability to reason about the causal relations between events...
The aim of this dissertation was to develop a novel behavioural method to assess young children’s ca...
The ability to think about and plan for the future is a critical cognitive skill for our daily life....
The current study examined 3‐ and 7‐year‐olds' performance on two types of episodic foresight tasks:...
Four experiments examined children's ability to reason about the causal significance of the order in...
Previous experiments have demonstrated that by four years of age children can use information from a...
In this paper, we shall use Tulving's seminal empirical and theoretical research including the 'Spoo...
Six experiments examined children's ability to make inferences using temporal order information. Chi...
The current study examined the impact of psychological distance on children's performance on the pre...