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| An Introduction to Cognitive Development | p. 1 |
| Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development | p. 2 |
| Some Issues in Cognitive Development | p. 6 |
| Changes That Occur in Cognitive Development | p. 20 |
| Overview of the Remainder of the Book | p. 22 |
| Summary | p. 23 |
| Biological Bases of Cognitive Development | p. 26 |
| Evolution and Cognitive Development | p. 28 |
| Mode... MORE | p. 33 |
| The Development of the Brain | p. 43 |
| Developmental Biology and Cognitive Development | p. 56 |
| Summary | p. 57 |
| The Social Construction of Mind: Sociocultural Perspectives on Cognitive Development | p. 60 |
| The Role of Culture in Cognitive Development | p. 62 |
| Implications for Education | p. 73 |
| Sociocultural Theory and Cognitive Development | p. 75 |
| Summary | p. 75 |
| Piaget and the Neo-Piagetians | p. 78 |
| Some Assumptions of Piaget's Theory | p. 79 |
| Stages of Development | p. 83 |
| The State of Piaget's Theory Today | p. 103 |
| Neo-Piagetian Theories | p. 107 |
| Summary | p. 113 |
| Information-Processing Approaches | p. 118 |
| Assumptions of Information-Processing Approaches | p. 119 |
| Information-Processing Perspectives on Development | p. 123 |
| Capacity and Cognitive Development | p. 129 |
| Learning How Not to Respond: Inhibition and Resistance to Interference | p. 134 |
| The Role of Knowledge Base in Cognitive Development | p. 140 |
| Fuzzy-Trace Theory | p. 142 |
| Connectionist Perspective of Developmental Change | p. 146 |
| Summary | p. 147 |
| Learning to Think on Their Own: The Role of Strategies in Cognitive Development | p. 151 |
| The Development of Strategies | p. 152 |
| Strategies and Metacognition | p. 167 |
| Culture and Strategies | p. 171 |
| How Do Children's Strategies Develop? | p. 172 |
| Strategies in the Classroom | p. 178 |
| Summary | p. 180 |
| Infant Perception | p. 183 |
| Basic Perceptual Abilities of Young Infants | p. 184 |
| Some Methodologies Used to Assess Infant Perception | p. 185 |
| Auditory Development | p. 187 |
| The Development of Visual Perception | p. 190 |
| Intermodal Integration | p. 199 |
| Category Representation | p. 201 |
| Infant Perception: A Successful Past and a Bright Future | p. 205 |
| Summary | p. 206 |
| Spatial Cognition | p. 208 |
| The Development of Spatial Abilities in Infants and Toddlers | p. 209 |
| Spatial Cognition Beyond Infancy | p. 220 |
| Gender Differences in Spatial Cognition | p. 225 |
| The Development of Spatial Abilities in Perspective | p. 230 |
| Summary | p. 231 |
| Representation | p. 233 |
| Mental Representation Through Infancy | p. 234 |
| Learning to Use Symbols | p. 241 |
| Children's Theory of Mind | p. 248 |
| Classification | p. 257 |
| Summary | p. 262 |
| Memory Development | p. 265 |
| Memory Development in Infancy | p. 267 |
| Implicit Memory | p. 276 |
| The Development of Event Memory | p. 278 |
| Children as Eyewitnesses | p. 282 |
| Consistency and Stability of Memory | p. 294 |
| Forgetting | p. 296 |
| Summary | p. 297 |
| Language Development | p. 299 |
| What Makes a Communication System a Language? | p. 300 |
| Describing Children's Language Development | p. 301 |
| Some Theoretical Perspectives of Language Development | p. 318 |
| Gender Differences in Language Acquisition | p. 331 |
| Language and Thought | p. 333 |
| Summary | p. 334 |
| Problem Solving and Reasoning | p. 338 |
| Problem Solving | p. 339 |
| Tool Use | p. 344 |
| Planning | p. 348 |
| Reasoning | p. 351 |
| Summary | p. 361 |
| Social Cognition | p. 364 |
| Social Learning | p. 365 |
| Social Cognitive Theory | p. 368 |
| Cultural Learning | p. 371 |
| Social Information Processing | p. 374 |
| The Development of a Concept of Self | p. 377 |
| Cognitive Bases of Gender Identity | p. 379 |
| How "Special" Is Social Cognition? | p. 388 |
| Summary | p. 388 |
| Schooling and Cognition | p. 391 |
| The Development of Reading Skills | p. 392 |
| Children's Number and Arithmetic Concepts | p. 404 |
| Schooling and Cognitive Development | p. 421 |
| Summary | p. 426 |
| Approaches to the Study of Intelligence | p. 429 |
| The Psychometric Approach to the Study of Intelligence | p. 430 |
| Information-Processing Approaches to the Study of Intelligence | p. 440 |
| Piagetian Approaches to the Study of Intelligence | p. 448 |
| Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of Intelligence | p. 449 |
| Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences | p. 454 |
| Summary | p. 459 |
| Origins, Modification, and Stability of Intellectual Differences | p. 461 |
| A Transactional Approach to the Study of Intelligence | p. 463 |
| Behavior Genetics and the Heritability of Intelligence | p. 465 |
| Experience and Intelligence | p. 475 |
| The Stability of Intelligence | p. 487 |
| Summary | p. 495 |
| Epilogue: Cognitive Development: What Changes and How? | p. 498 |
| Seven "Truths" About Cognitive Development | p. 499 |
| Diversity of Opinions, But a Single Science | p. 506 |
| Glossary | p. 508 |
| References | p. 522 |
| Credits | p. 578 |
| Author Index | p. 582 |
| Subject Index | p. 595 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |