A cognitive complexity metric applied to cognitive development
Data(s) |
01/01/2002
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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 | |
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 |