Searching and planning: young children's reasoning about past and future event sequences.

Six experiments examined children's ability to make inferences using temporal order information. Children completed versions of a task involving a toy zoo; one version required reasoning about past events (search task) and the other required reasoning about future events (planning task). Children younger than 5 years failed both the search and the planning tasks, whereas 5-year-olds passed both (Experiments 1 and 2). However, when the number of events in the sequence was reduced (Experiment 3), 4-year-olds were successful on the search task but not the planning task. Planning difficulties persisted even when relevant cues were provided (Experiments 4 and 5). Experiment 6 showed that improved performance on the search task found in Experiment 3 was not due to the removal of response ambiguity.

[1]  T. McCormack,et al.  Young children's reasoning about the order of past events. , 2007, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[2]  A. Dickinson,et al.  Planning for the future by western scrub-jays , 2007, Nature.

[3]  D. Hassabis,et al.  Patients with hippocampal amnesia cannot imagine new experiences , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[4]  K. Szpunar,et al.  Neural substrates of envisioning the future , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[5]  E. Robinson,et al.  Children's sensitivity to their own relative ignorance: Handling of possibilities under conditions of epistemic and physical uncertainty , 2006 .

[6]  E. Robinson,et al.  Children's sensitivity to their own relative ignorance: handling of possibilities under epistemic and physical uncertainty. , 2006, Child development.

[7]  L. Moses,et al.  Executive functioning and preschoolers' understanding of false beliefs, false photographs, and false signs. , 2006, Child development.

[8]  Josep Call,et al.  Tracking the displacement of objects: a series of tasks with great apes (Pan troglodytes, Pan paniscus, Gorilla gorilla, and Pongo pygmaeus) and young children (Homo sapiens). , 2006, Journal of experimental psychology. Animal behavior processes.

[9]  E. Robinson,et al.  Children's thinking about counterfactuals and future hypotheticals as possibilities. , 2006, Child development.

[10]  J. Hudson The Development of Future Time Concepts Through Mother-Child Conversation , 2006 .

[11]  T. Suddendorf,et al.  Recalling yesterday and predicting tomorrow , 2005 .

[12]  A. Meltzoff,et al.  My future self: Young children's ability to anticipate and explain future states. , 2005, Cognitive development.

[13]  Thomas Suddendorf,et al.  Making decisions with the future in mind: Developmental and comparative identification of mental time travel , 2005 .

[14]  W. Friedman,et al.  Developmental and Cognitive Perspectives on Humans' Sense of the Times of Past and Future Events. , 2005 .

[15]  C. Atance,et al.  The Emergence of Episodic Future Thinking in Humans. , 2005 .

[16]  Laura J. Claxton,et al.  Individual differences in executive functioning and theory of mind: An investigation of inhibitory control and planning ability. , 2004, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[17]  Thomas Suddendorf,et al.  Mental time travel in animals? , 2003, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[18]  A. Dickinson,et al.  Can animals recall the past and plan for the future? , 2003, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[19]  T. Suddendorf Early representational insight: twenty-four-month-olds can use a photo to find an object in the world. , 2003, Child development.

[20]  J. Hudson "Do You Know What We're Going to Do This Summer?": Mothers' Talk to Preschool Children About Future Events , 2002 .

[21]  C. Atance,et al.  Episodic future thinking , 2001, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[22]  J. Russell,et al.  Executive control within strategic deception: a window on early cognitive development? , 2001, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[23]  E. Tulving Episodic memory and common sense: how far apart? , 2001, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[24]  David M. Sobel,et al.  Causal learning mechanisms in very young children: two-, three-, and four-year-olds infer causal relations from patterns of variation and covariation. , 2001, Developmental psychology.

[25]  “Continuing Me” Katherine Nelson Language and the Self: From the “Experiencing I” to the “Continuing Me” , 2001 .

[26]  Daniel J. Povinelli,et al.  The Self: Elevated in Consciousness and Extended in Time , 2001 .

[27]  D. Povinelli,et al.  Development of young children's understanding that the recent past is causally bound to the present. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[28]  P. Bauer,et al.  Planning ahead: goal-directed problem solving by 2-year-olds. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[29]  Teresa McCormack,et al.  Memory and temporal perspective: The role of temporal frameworks in memory development. , 1999 .

[30]  V. Slaughter,et al.  Children's understanding of pictorial and mental representations. , 1998, Child development.

[31]  U. Goswami,et al.  Cognition In Children , 1998 .

[32]  C. Nelson,et al.  The functional emergence of prefrontally-guided working memory systems in four- to eight-year-old children , 1998, Neuropsychologia.

[33]  R. Corrigan,et al.  Causal Understanding as a Developmental Primitive. , 1996 .

[34]  J. Hudson,et al.  Planning in the real world: preschool children's scripts and plans for familiar events. , 1995, Child development.

[35]  J. Perner,et al.  Episodic memory and autonoetic consciousness: developmental evidence and a theory of childhood amnesia. , 1995, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[36]  Judy S. DeLoache,et al.  Early understanding of the representational function of pictures , 1994, Cognition.

[37]  R. Fivush,et al.  Planning in the preschool years: The emergence of plans from general event knowledge , 1991 .

[38]  D. Zaitchik,et al.  When representations conflict with reality: The preschooler's problem with false beliefs and “false” photographs , 1990, Cognition.

[39]  J. Mandler,et al.  One thing follows another: Effects of temporal structure on 1- to 2-year-olds' recall of events. , 1989 .

[40]  S. Somerville,et al.  Early developments in logical reasoning: Considering alternative possibilities , 1988 .

[41]  M. Garman,et al.  Tense and aspect , 1986 .

[42]  J M Mandler,et al.  Developmental changes in the understanding of temporal sequence. , 1985, Child development.

[43]  S. Somerville,et al.  Logical searches of young children in hiding and finding tasks , 1984 .

[44]  A. Trosborg,et al.  Children's comprehension of ‘before’ and ‘after’ reinvestigated , 1982, Journal of Child Language.

[45]  L. Harner Children Talk about the Time and Aspect of Actions. , 1981 .

[46]  D. Klahr,et al.  Formal assessment of problem-solving and planning processes in preschool children , 1981, Cognitive Psychology.

[47]  H. Wellman,et al.  Logical Ability of Young Children in Searching a Large-Scale Environment. , 1980 .

[48]  S. Somerville,et al.  Development of Search Procedures in Real-Life Spatial Environments. , 1979 .

[49]  W. Friedman,et al.  The development of children's understanding of cyclic aspects of time. , 1977, Child development.

[50]  R. Cromer The development of the ability to decenter in time. , 1971, British journal of psychology.

[51]  Hans Reichenbach,et al.  Elements of symbolic logic , 1948 .

[52]  T. Suddendorf,et al.  Do chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and 2-year-old children (Homo sapiens) understand double invisible displacement? , 2006, Journal of comparative psychology.

[53]  E. Tulving Episodic Memory and Autonoesis: Uniquely Human? , 2005 .

[54]  Teresa McCormack,et al.  Joint reminiscing as joint attention to the past , 2005 .

[55]  T. McCormack,et al.  Children's reasoning about the causal significance of the temporal order of events. , 2005, Developmental psychology.

[56]  Judith A. Hudson,et al.  Effects of Internal and External Supports on Preschool Children's Event Planning. , 2004 .

[57]  L. S. Liben Beyond point and shoot: children's developing understanding of photographs as spatial and expressive representations. , 2003, Advances in child development and behavior.

[58]  W. Friedman The development of a differentiated sense of the past and the future. , 2003, Advances in child development and behavior.

[59]  T. McCormack,et al.  The child in time : temporal concepts and self-consciousness in the development of episodic memory , 2001 .

[60]  M. Welch-Ross,et al.  Personalizing the temporally extended self: Evaluative self-awareness and the development of autobiographical memory. , 2001 .

[61]  J. Sommerville,et al.  Levels of consciousness of the self in time , 2001 .

[62]  J. Perner,et al.  Misrepresentation and Referential Confusion: Children's Difficulty with False Beliefs and Outdated Photographs , 1998 .

[63]  Katherine Nelson,et al.  Language In Cognitive Development , 1996 .

[64]  M. Welsh Rule-guided behavior and self-monitoring on the tower of hanoi disk-transfer task , 1991 .

[65]  P. Harris The work of imagination , 1991 .

[66]  Richard M. Weist,et al.  Chapter 2 Time Concepts in Language and Thought: Filling the Piagetian Void from Two to Five Years , 1989 .

[67]  S. Somerville,et al.  Development of Logical Search Skills in Infancy. , 1985 .

[68]  L. Anooshian,et al.  Determinants of young children's search strategies in a large-scale environment. , 1982 .