Associative responding versus analogical reasoning by children
Following upon work which showed that college and high school students' analogy solutions were predictable from ratings of the relatedness of the words comprising the analogy choices, this study extended those results to children's analogy solutions. Achenbach's Children's Associ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Intelligence (Norwood) 1977-10, Vol.1 (4), p.369-380 |
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creator | Gentile, J.Ronald Tedesco-Stratton, Lisa Davis, Elaine Lund, Nancy J. Agunanne, Boniface C. |
description | Following upon work which showed that college and high school students' analogy solutions were predictable from ratings of the relatedness of the words comprising the analogy choices, this study extended those results to children's analogy solutions. Achenbach's Children's Associative Responding Test was used as the criterion to determine (1) whether analogy solutions by children were as related to word relatedness ratings as analogy solutions were in previous subject samples, (2) whether individual differences in using associative responding versus analogical reasoning processes could enhance the predictability estimates, and (3) whether associative priming can affect analogy solutions. Two correlational studies were done, one on an American and another on a Nigerian sample. A third study was an experimental manipulation of choices on analogy items on an American sample. The results suggest that the answer to questions (1) and (3) is yes, but the answer to question (2) is no. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/0160-2896(77)90019-8 |
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title | Associative responding versus analogical reasoning by children |
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