Believing what you’re told: Young children’s trust in unexpected testimony about the physical world
Top Cited Papers
- 22 July 2010
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Cognitive Psychology
- Vol. 61 (3) , 248-272
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cogpsych.2010.06.002
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 74 references indexed in Scilit:
- Imagining a Way Out of the Gravity Bias: Preschoolers Can Visualize the Solution to a Spatial ProblemChild Development, 2011
- Compliance, conversion, and category inductionJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
- Learning from Others: Children's Construction of ConceptsAnnual Review of Psychology, 2009
- Limitations on Reliability: Regularity Rules in the English Plural and Past TenseChild Development, 2008
- The hidden structure of overimitationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Children prefer certain individuals over perfect duplicatesPublished by Elsevier ,2007
- Gravity does rule for falling eventsDevelopmental Science, 1998
- Surprising, magical and miraculous turns of events: Children's reactions to violations of their early theories of mind and matterBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1994
- Young children's ability to identify the sources of their beliefs.Developmental Psychology, 1991
- Origins of verbal logic: spontaneous denials by two- and three-year oldsJournal of Child Language, 1982