During development, children must learn both broad facts about the world (that dogs have four legs, for example) and information that is more specific (that the family dog is scared of snow). While research in developmental psychology suggests that young children should have an easier time learning specific, concrete facts, a new study reveals that they learn general facts so effortlessly that they often can’t tell that they learned anything new at all.
http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/mi1dowa7qgg/150708111253.htm
Learning categorical information gives children a feeling of deja vu
8 julio 2015
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