2021
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.630609
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The Development of Relational Reasoning in South Korean Elementary and Middle-School Students: A Cross-Sectional Investigation

Abstract: Relational reasoning is a higher-order executive function that involves the ability to perceive meaningful patterns within a body of seemingly unrelated information. In this study, the ability of 749 fourth (Mage = 10), sixth (Mage = 12), eighth (Mage = 14), and tenth graders (Mage = 16) to identify meaningful relational patterns was investigated. This general cognitive ability was assessed by means of the Test of Relational Reasoning-Junior (TORRjr), a 32-item measure organized into four 8-item scales that as… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(109 reference statements)
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“…Because students at all grade levels took TORRjr, we were able to identify developmental trajectories for the four forms assessed (i.e., analogical, anomalous, antinomous, and antithesis). The patterns that emerged were similar to outcomes reported in prior studies (Chae & Alexander, 2019; Jablansky, Alexander, Dumas, et al, 2016, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…Because students at all grade levels took TORRjr, we were able to identify developmental trajectories for the four forms assessed (i.e., analogical, anomalous, antinomous, and antithesis). The patterns that emerged were similar to outcomes reported in prior studies (Chae & Alexander, 2019; Jablansky, Alexander, Dumas, et al, 2016, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…It is also worth noting that antithetical reasoning items were among the more challenging for the students in this study. The difficulty of the antithetical reasoning items is a rather consistent finding across investigations involving both children and adults regardless of whether the TORR, TORRjr, or verbal discourse patterns were the data sources (Chae & Alexander, 2019;Jablansky et al, 2017). At present, we attribute this challenge to the fact that there are two judgments that this reasoning form seemingly requires.…”
Section: Development Of Relational Reasoningmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…Similar trends have also been reported for in vitro studies, with younger populations showing somewhat higher performance on analogical and anomalous reasoning problems in contrast to antinomous and antithetical reasoning problems. This pattern has also manifested in international studies with Chinese (Zhao, Alexander, & Sun, 2020), Israeli (Jablansky, Alexander, Eilam, Aharon, & Sun, 2017), Russian (Federiakin, 2020), and South Korean (Authors, 2021) children, adolescents, and adults.…”
Section: Why Relational Reasoning?mentioning
confidence: 69%