The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Development

Sciences du langage
Auteur(s)
Sous la direction d'Olivier Houdé et Grégoire Borst
Publication
March 2022
Appartenance
Laboratoire de Psychologie du Développement et de l'Education de l'enfant (LaPsyDÉ)
Éditeur
Cambridge University Press

How does cognition develop in infants, children and adolescents?

This handbook presents a cutting-edge overview of the field of cognitive development, spanning basic methodology, key domain-based findings and applications. Part One covers the neurobiological constraints and laws of brain development, while Part Two covers the fundamentals of cognitive development from birth to adulthood: object, number, categorization, reasoning, decision-making and socioemotional cognition. The final Part Three covers educational and school-learning domains, including numeracy, literacy, scientific reasoning skills, working memory and executive skills, metacognition, curiosity-driven active learning and more. Featuring chapters written by the world's leading scholars in experimental and developmental psychology, as well as in basic neurobiology, cognitive neuroscience, computational modelling and developmental robotics, this collection is the most comprehensive reference work to date on cognitive development of the twenty-first century. It will be a vital resource for scholars and graduate students in developmental psychology, neuroeducation and the cognitive sciences.

À propos des auteurs

Olivier Houdé is Professor of Psychology at the University of Paris, where he is the honorary director of the Laboratory of Psychology at the Sorbonne. He is an academician at the Institut de France. One of the world's leading specialists of cognitive development, he is Editor in Chief of the Dictionary of Cognitive Science (2004).

Grégoire Borst is Professor of Psychology at the University of Paris, where he is the director of the Laboratory of Psychology at the Sorbonne. A rising star in the areas of cognitive development and neuroeducation, he is also a member of the board of the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.