Article de revue: ID no. (ISBN etc.):  1363755X Clé de citation BibTeX:  Perret2003
Perret, P., Paour, J.-L., & Blaye, A. (2003). Respective contributions of inhibition and knowledge levels in class inclusion development: A negative priming study. Developmental Science, 6(3), p. p283–288.
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane 2007-12-12 14:07:11    Dernièrement modifiée par: Lynda Taabane 2007-12-21 13:28:34
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Catégories: Full text, Raisonnement
Descripteurs: CHILD development, CHILD psychology, CHILDREN, REASONING (Psychology)
Auteurs: Blaye, Paour, Perret
Collection: Developmental Science

Nombre de vues:  324
Popularité:  29.37%

 
Résumé
Abstract Dempster ( Dempster, 1995; Dempster & Corkill, 1999) proposed that developmental changes in performance on Piagetian tasks could be related to changes in inhibitory efficiency more than to logical development. In this study, the negative priming paradigm was adapted to the class inclusion task in order to investigate the role of inhibition and knowledge levels in the development of class inclusion. Participants were pre-tested on two inclusion tasks, the standard Piagetian task and Markman's modification task, and assigned to different knowledge levels: empirical, and logical necessity. Children were then tested on a priming version of the class inclusion task. Results showed a negative priming effect, indicating that the irrelevant ‘subclass comparison strategy’ was actively inhibited during the processing of the class inclusion task. This effect was found to vary as a function of knowledge levels, indicating that the need for inhibition was reduced when children had attaine
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane    Dernièrement modifiée par: Lynda Taabane

 
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