Literature DB >> 10836563

Grounding development in cognitive processes.

L K Samuelson1, L B Smith.   

Abstract

Developmentalists have made remarkable progress over the last several decades in detailing what children know at various points in development. Less progress has been made, however, in detailing the processes through which knowledge is realized in real-time tasks, or in detailing the processes of developmental change. We argue that the operating characteristics of perceiving and remembering provide a foundation for making progress on these issues in the next century. We include three examples applying these ideas to specific phenomena in early word learning. These examples illustrate how forming developmental hypotheses in terms of perceiving and remembering may bring new insights into specific phenomena as well as into how the ordinary operating characteristics of perceiving and remembering serve as bootstraps to more specialized and more abstract kinds of knowledge.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10836563     DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00123

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  21 in total

1.  Sea lions and equivalence: expanding classes by exclusion.

Authors:  Colleen Reichmuth Kastak; Ronald J Schusterman
Journal:  J Exp Anal Behav       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 2.468

2.  Conceptual influences on induction: A case for a late onset.

Authors:  Vladimir M Sloutsky; Wei Sophia Deng; Anna V Fisher; Heidi Kloos
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2015-09-05       Impact factor: 3.468

3.  What's new? Children prefer novelty in referent selection.

Authors:  Jessica S Horst; Larissa K Samuelson; Sarah C Kucker; Bob McMurray
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2010-11-18

4.  Adult and child semantic neighbors of the Kroll and Potter (1984) nonobjects.

Authors:  Holly L Storkel; Suzanne M Adlof
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2009-02-27       Impact factor: 2.297

5.  Rethinking Conceptually-Based Inference: Commentary on "Fifteen-month-old infants attend to shape over other perceptual properties in an induction task," by S. Graham and G. Diesendruck, and "Form follows function: Learning about function helps children learn about shape," by E. Ware & A. Booth.

Authors:  Larissa K Samuelson; Sammy Perone
Journal:  Cogn Dev       Date:  2010-04

Review 6.  Contributions of modern network science to the cognitive sciences: revisiting research spirals of representation and process.

Authors:  Nichol Castro; Cynthia S Q Siew
Journal:  Proc Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2020-06-10       Impact factor: 2.704

7.  Learning words in space and time: probing the mechanisms behind the suspicious-coincidence effect.

Authors:  John P Spencer; Sammy Perone; Linda B Smith; Larissa K Samuelson
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2011-06-24

8.  Categorical structure among shared features in networks of early-learned nouns.

Authors:  Thomas T Hills; Mounir Maouene; Josita Maouene; Adam Sheya; Linda Smith
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2009-07-02

9.  Moving Word Learning to a Novel Space: A Dynamic Systems View of Referent Selection and Retention.

Authors:  Larissa K Samuelson; Sarah C Kucker; John P Spencer
Journal:  Cogn Sci       Date:  2016-04-29

10.  The dynamic nature of knowledge: insights from a dynamic field model of children's novel noun generalization.

Authors:  Larissa K Samuelson; Anne R Schutte; Jessica S Horst
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2009-01-07
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