Embedding cognizance in intellectual development
Date
2015Author
Spanoudis,George C.Demetriou, Andreas P.
Kazi, Smaragda
Giorgala, K.
Zenonos, V.
Source
Journal of experimental child psychologyVolume
132Pages
32-50Google Scholar check
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This study examined whether cognizance of cognitive processes (i.e., awareness of the perceptual and inferential origins of knowledge) mediates between basic processing efficiency functions (i.e., processing speed, attention control, and working memory) and fluid cognition (e.g., performance on Raven-like matrices) during development. For this aim, children from 4 to 8. years of age were examined by various measures addressed to each of these processes. All processes developed systematically throughout this age period. Structural equation modeling showed that awareness does have this mediating role, that this mediation is phase specific based on perceptual awareness and theory of mind during the 5- and 6-year phase and on inferential awareness during the 7- and 8-year phase, and that it builds up within each developmental cycle. Attention control emerges from, rather than directs, working memory and largely remains beyond awareness through the age span studied. Implications for theory of intellectual development are discussed. © 2014 Elsevier Inc.