31 research outputs found
Children Base Their Investment on Calculated Pay-Off
To investigate the rise of economic abilities during development we studied children aged between 3 and 10 in an exchange situation requiring them to calculate their investment based on different offers. One experimenter gave back a reward twice the amount given by the children, and a second always gave back the same quantity regardless of the amount received. To maximize pay-offs children had to invest a maximal amount with the first, and a minimal amount with the second. About one third of the 5-year-olds and most 7- and 10-year-olds were able to adjust their investment according to the partner, while all 3-year-olds failed. Such performances should be related to the rise of cognitive and social skills after 4 years
Empirical and Phenomenological Studies of Embodied Cognition
This surveys central results in empirical and phenomenological studies of embodied cognition. The central effort is to show how Husserl's phenomenology and emphasis on kinaesthesis leads to an argument that cognition must inherently be embodied