A cognitive complexity metric applied to cognitive development


Autoria(s): Andrews, G.; Halford, G. S.
Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Two experiments tested predictions from a theory in which processing load depends on relational complexity (RC), the number of variables related in a single decision. Tasks from six domains (transitivity, hierarchical classification, class inclusion, cardinality, relative-clause sentence comprehension, and hypothesis testing) were administered to children aged 3-8 years. Complexity analyses indicated that the domains entailed ternary relations (three variables). Simpler binary-relation (two variables) items were included for each domain. Thus RC was manipulated with other factors tightly controlled. Results indicated that (i) ternary-relation items were more difficult than comparable binary-relation items, (ii) the RC manipulation was sensitive to age-related changes, (iii) ternary relations were processed at a median age of 5 years, (iv) cross-task correlations were positive, with all tasks loading on a single factor (RC), (v) RC factor scores accounted for 80% (88%) of age-related variance in fluid intelligence (compositionality of sets), (vi) binary- and ternary-relation items formed separate complexity classes, and (vii) the RC approach to defining cognitive complexity is applicable to different content domains. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:63208

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Academic Press

Palavras-Chave #Psychology #Psychology, Experimental #Short-term-memory #Working-memory #Transitive Inferences #Individual-differences #Capacity Limitations #Class Inclusion #Young-children #Intelligence #Childhood #Representation #C1 #380102 Learning, Memory, Cognition and Language
Tipo

Journal Article