31 research outputs found
Coreferential Interpretations of Reflexives in Picture Noun Phrases: An Experimental Approach
In English, reflexives (himself) and pronouns (him) have a nearly complementary distribution. That is, in the same structural position, a reflexive and a pronoun will have complementary referential domains: (1) Keni saw himselfi/*j
Speech Facilitates the Categorization of Motions in 9-Month-Old Infants
Two experiments were used to investigate the influence of both native and non-native speech on the categorization of a set of an object’s motions by 9-month-olds. In Experiment 1, infants were habituated to a set of three object motions and tested with familiar and novel motions. Results of Experiment 1 show that infants were more likely to categorize the motion stimuli if they listened to either the native or non-native speech during the categorization process than if they listened to music or heard nothing at all. Results of Experiment 2 show that discrimination of the motions was not impaired by the presence of the labeling phrases. These results are consistent with a number of findings that report a unique influence of labels on categorization of static objects in infancy and extend those findings to categorization of motions
A national harmonised data collection network for neurodevelopmental disorders: A transdiagnostic assessment protocol for neurodevelopment, mental health, functioning and well-being
BACKGROUND: Children with neurodevelopmental disorders share common phenotypes, support needs and comorbidities. Such overlap suggests the value of transdiagnostic assessment pathways that contribute to knowledge about research and clinical needs of these children and their families. Despite this, large transdiagnostic data collection networks for neurodevelopmental disorders are not well developed. This paper describes the development of a nationally supported transdiagnostic clinical and research assessment protocol across Australia. The vision is to establish a harmonised network for data collection and collaboration that promotes transdiagnostic clinical practice and research. METHODS: Clinicians, researchers and community groups across Australia were consulted using surveys and national summits to identify assessment instruments and unmet needs. A national research committee was formed and, using a consensus approach, selected assessment instruments according to pre-determined criteria to form a harmonised transdiagnostic assessment protocol. RESULTS: Identified assessment instruments were clustered into domains of transdiagnostic assessment needs, which included child functioning/quality of life, child mental health, caregiver mental health, and family background information. From this, the research committee identified a core set of nine measures and an extended set of 14 measures that capture these domains with potential for further modifications as recommended by clinicians, researchers and community members. CONCLUSION: The protocol proposed here was established through a strong partnership between clinicians, researchers and the community. It will enable (i) consensus driven transdiagnostic clinical assessments for children with neurodevelopmental disorders, and (ii) research studies that will inform large transdiagnostic datasets across neurodevelopmental disorders and that can be used to inform research and policy beyond narrow diagnostic groups. The long-term vision is to use this framework to facilitate collaboration across clinics to enable large-scale data collection and research. Ultimately, the transdiagnostic assessment data can be used to inform practice and improve the lives of children with neurodevelopmental disorders and their families
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Buy a Relation, Get the Role Half Off: Instantiating Event Representations for Novel Denominal Verbs
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Structural Priming Depends on Semantic Similarity in 4 Year-Olds but not 5 Year Olds
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Generalizing relations during analogical problem solving in preschool children: does blocked or interleaved training improve performance?
Analogical reasoning, the mapping of structured relations across
conceptual domains, is commonly recognized as essential to
human cognition, but young children often perform poorly in the
classical A:B::C:? analogical reasoning task. Particularly, young
children have trouble when the objects in the task are not
strongly associated with each other, and/or when there are strong
associative lures among the potential answers. Here, we examine
whether successive trials that repeat the same relation needed to
solve the analogy can help overcome some of the challenges
with weakly associated items. In the first of two experiments,
our results were mixed. In the second, we simplified the design,
and were able to more clearly show a benefit of repeating
relations across consecutively solved problems