Children's ability to make transitive inferences: The importance of premise integration and structural complexity
- 1 October 1998
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Cognitive Development
- Vol. 13 (4), 479-513
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0885-2014(98)90004-1
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transitivity judgments, memory for premises, and models of children's reasoning*1Developmental Review, 1992
- Systematicity as a selection constraint in analogical mappingCognitive Science, 1991
- Concrete operations and attentional capacityJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1989
- Functions, operations, and decalage in the development of transitivity.Developmental Psychology, 1988
- Remembering and Constructing an OrderThe Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1987
- Development of the Ability to Insert into a SeriesThe Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1987
- Piaget, Attentional Capacity, and the Functional Implications of Formal StructureAdvances in Child Development and Behavior, 1987
- Structure‐Mapping: A Theoretical Framework for Analogy*Cognitive Science, 1983
- Reevaluation of the literature on the development of transitive inferences.Psychological Bulletin, 1981
- Transitive Inferences and Memory in Young ChildrenNature, 1971