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Emerging themes in the development of prospective memory during childhood
Abstract: Six years ago, Kvavilashvili, Kyle, and Messer (2008) called for more research in the area of chil dren’s prospective memory (PM), defined as the ability to remember to carry out delayed intentions (Einstein & McDaniel, 1990). At that time, the literature on PM in children was scant, although a few well-developed paradigms were available to measure PM in preschool-age children (Kvavilashvili, Messer, & Ebdon, 2001) and older children during middle childhood (Kerns, 2000). Although there is still much work to be done, the last few years have seen a steep rise in the number of studies on the topic of PM during childhood examining children as young as 2 years using a wide variety of time- and event-based PM paradigms. This recent increase in research activity in children’s PM was reflected in the high number of initial submissions for this special issue (20 manuscripts). The current special issue on the development of PM during childhood offers an overview of this burgeoning area of research, studying children from toddlerhood to adolescence, who are typically and atypically developing, using a wide variety of methods, including naturalistic tasks, experimental tasks, and parent report measures. In what follows, we first discuss the four sections of this special issue: PM research during early childhood, PM and episodic future thinking, PM in clinical populations, and PM during adolescence. We then highlight some emerging themes in this collection of articles that cut across these sections and highlight the contribution such topics will make to the field of PM.
Keyword: Adolescent; Age factors; Child; Child development; Episodic; Executive function; Humans; Memory; Preschool
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10464/15307
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2014.04.003
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2
The development of executive function in early childhood
Zelazo, Philip D.; Mueller, Walter; Frye, D.. - Oxford : Blackwell, 2003
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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3
The potential contribution of computational modeling to the study of cognitive development : when, and for what topics? . - Cognitive development : The potential contribution of computational modeling to the study of cognitive development : when, and for what topics? . -
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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