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58 results on '"Sommerville JA"'

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1. Drivers of social cognitive development in human and non-human primate infants

2. Girls persist more but divest less from ineffective teaching than boys.

3. The haves and have-nots: Infants use wealth to guide social behavior and evaluation.

4. Toddlers' Helping Behavior Is Affected by the Effortful Costs Associated With Helping Others.

5. The origins of moral sensitivities: Probing infants' expectations, evaluations, generalization, and enforcement of moral norms.

6. Children's inferences of moral character across different moral subdomains.

7. It takes two: Process praise linking trying and success is associated with greater infant persistence.

8. Not just if, but how much: Children and adults use cost and need to make evaluations about generosity across contexts.

9. Generalizing across moral sub-domains: infants bidirectionally link fairness and unfairness to helping and hindering.

10. Investigating the detection of parent-child relationships in early childhood: The role of partiality in resource distributions.

11. A New Look at Infant Problem-Solving: Using DeepLabCut to Investigate Exploratory Problem-Solving Approaches.

12. Toddlers' interventions toward fair and unfair individuals.

13. Infants preferentially help individuals who label objects conventionally.

14. Infants rationally decide when and how to deploy effort.

15. Keep trying!: Parental language predicts infants' persistence.

16. That's not fair: Children's neural computations of fairness and their impact on resource allocation behaviors and judgments.

18. The Little Engine That Can: Infants' Persistence Matters.

19. Infants' Understanding of Distributive Fairness as a Test Case for Identifying the Extents and Limits of Infants' Sociomoral Cognition and Behavior.

20. Infants' prosocial behavior is governed by cost-benefit analyses.

21. The choice is yours: Infants' expectations about an agent's future behavior based on taking and receiving actions.

22. The origins of infants' fairness concerns and links to prosocial behavior.

23. Fairness informs social decision making in infancy.

24. Developmental Differences in Infants' Fairness Expectations From 6 to 15 Months of Age.

25. False-belief reasoning from 3 to 92 years of age.

26. 'To the victor go the spoils': Infants expect resources to align with dominance structures.

27. Once a frog-lover, always a frog-lover?: Infants' goal generalization is influenced by the nature of accompanying speech.

28. Income, neural executive processes, and preschool children's executive control.

29. Experience facilitates the emergence of sharing behavior among 7.5-month-old infants.

30. Infants Associate Praise and Admonishment with Fair and Unfair Individuals.

31. Infants' grip strength predicts mu rhythm attenuation during observation of lifting actions with weighted blocks.

32. Enhanced Neural Processing of Goal-directed Actions After Active Training in 4-Month-Old Infants.

34. Parents' empathic perspective taking and altruistic behavior predicts infants' arousal to others' emotions.

35. Shifting goals: effects of active and observational experience on infants' understanding of higher order goals.

36. Twelve-month-old infants anticipatorily plan their actions according to expected object weight in a novel motor context.

37. "I pick you": the impact of fairness and race on infants' selection of social partners.

38. Assessing the role of memory in preschoolers' performance on episodic foresight tasks.

39. Attending to what matters: flexibility in adults' and infants' action perception.

40. Measuring beliefs in centimeters: private knowledge biases preschoolers' and adults' representation of others' beliefs.

41. The role of motor experience in understanding action function: the case of the precision grasp.

42. Developmental changes in the discrimination of dynamic human actions in infancy.

43. The nature of goal-directed action representations in infancy.

44. Theory of mind through the ages: older and middle-aged adults exhibit more errors than do younger adults on a continuous false belief task.

45. Fairness expectations and altruistic sharing in 15-month-old human infants.

46. The Importance of Discovery in Children's Causal Learning from Interventions.

47. Ten-month-old infants use prior information to identify an actor's goal.

48. The emergence of intention attribution in infancy.

49. Experience matters: the impact of doing versus watching on infants' subsequent perception of tool-use events.

50. Cognitive control factors in speech perception at 11 months.

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