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  1. How Children’s Cognitive Reflection Shapes Their Science Understanding.Andrew G. Young & Andrew Shtulman - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  • Interference between naïve and scientific theories occurs in mathematics and is related to mathematical achievement.Johannes Stricker, Stephan E. Vogel, Silvia Schöneburg-Lehnert, Thomas Krohn, Susanne Dögnitz, Nina Jud, Michele Spirk, Marie-Christin Windhaber, Michael Schneider & Roland H. Grabner - 2021 - Cognition 214 (C):104789.
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  • From Non-symbolic to Symbolic Proportions and Back: A Cuisenaire Rod Proportional Reasoning Intervention Enhances Continuous Proportional Reasoning Skills.Roberto A. Abreu-Mendoza, Linsah Coulanges, Kendell Ali, Arthur B. Powell & Miriam Rosenberg-Lee - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The persistent educational challenges that fractions pose call for developing novel instructional methods to better prepare students for fraction learning. Here, we examined the effects of a 24-session, Cuisenaire rod intervention on a building block for symbolic fraction knowledge, continuous and discrete non-symbolic proportional reasoning, in children who have yet to receive fraction instruction. Participants were 34 second-graders who attended the intervention (intervention group) and 15 children who did not participate in any sessions (control group). As attendance at the intervention (...)
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  • Competing Explanations of Competing Explanations: Accounting for Conflict Between Scientific and Folk Explanations.Andrew Shtulman & Cristine H. Legare - 2020 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (4):1337-1362.
    Competing Explanations of Competing Explanations: Accounting for Conflict Between Scientific and Folk ExplanationsThis paper focuses on the level of people’s explanatory reasoning. It examines why laypeople prefer folk explanations of various physical or biological phenomena to alternative, well‐understood scientific explanations. Shtulman and Legare call this psychological phenomenon “explanatory co‐existence.” On the basis of new experimental data, they evaluate two possible accounts of explanatory co‐existence, a theory‐based and an associative account, and argue that a theory‐based account is the better supported.
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  • Theory of Mind, Personal Epistemology, and Science Learning: Exploring Common Conceptual Components.Natassa Kyriakopoulou & Stella Vosniadou - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:531223.
    We investigated the hypothesis that theory of mind (ToM) and epistemological understanding promote the aspect of science learning that concerns the ability to understand that there can be more than one representation of the same phenomenon in the physical world. Sixty-three students ranging in age from 10 to 12 years were administered two false-belief ToM tasks, an epistemological understanding task that investigated beliefs about the nature of science and a science learning task. The science learning task required distinguishing and reflecting (...)
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  • Inhibiting intuition: Scaffolding children's theory construction about species evolution in the face of competing explanations.Samuel Ronfard, Sarah Brown, Erin Doncaster & Deborah Kelemen - 2021 - Cognition 211 (C):104635.
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  • Specifying the domain-general resources that contribute to conceptual construction: Evidence from the child’s acquisition of vitalist biology.Nathan Tardiff, Igor Bascandziev, Susan Carey & Deborah Zaitchik - 2020 - Cognition 195 (C):104090.
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  • Tempering the tension between science and intuition.Andrew Shtulman & Andrew G. Young - 2024 - Cognition 243 (C):105680.
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