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The role of selective attention in preschoolers' rule use in a novel dimensional card sort

  • Autores: Patricia J. Brooks, Julie B. Hanauer, Barbara Padowska, Heidy Rosman
  • Localización: Cognitive development, ISSN 0885-2014, Vol. 18, Nº. 2, 2003, págs. 195-215
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Preschoolers often fail in switching between dimensions in sorting cards. To evaluate proposed cognitive constraints, we introduced a “same-silly” task, not requiring an extra-dimensional shift. Instructions were to sort cards so that the shapes were the same (“same” game) or not the same (“silly” game) as targets. In Experiment 1, using b/w line drawings, 3-year-olds successfully played both “same” and “silly” games. In Experiments 2 and 3, with the irrelevant dimension of color added to cards, most children below 4;6 perseverated on the “same” game, revealing an effect of stimulus complexity on rule-based reasoning. Thus, with uni-dimensional stimuli, 3-year-olds flexibly alternated between “same” and “silly” rules, but could not follow identical rules with bi-dimensional stimuli requiring selective attention to shape. We suggest that preschoolers’ difficulties in selective attention, rather than the presence of an extra-dimensional shift, lead to card sorting failure.


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