
We present two studies that examined developmental differences in the implicit and explicit acquisition of category knowledge. College-attending adults consistently outperformed school-age children on two separate information-integration paradigms due to children's more frequent use of an explicit rule-based strategy. Accuracy rates were also higher for adults on a unidimensional rule-based task due to children's more frequent use of the irrelevant dimension to guide their behavior. Results across these two studies suggest that the ability to learn categorization structures may be dependent on a child's ability to inhibit output from the explicit system.
Adult, Male, Adolescent, Critical Period, Psychological, Age Factors, Association Learning, Psychology, Child, Neuropsychological Tests, Discrimination Learning, Young Adult, Child Development, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Humans, Female, Child, Photic Stimulation
Adult, Male, Adolescent, Critical Period, Psychological, Age Factors, Association Learning, Psychology, Child, Neuropsychological Tests, Discrimination Learning, Young Adult, Child Development, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Humans, Female, Child, Photic Stimulation
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