Abstract: | Coding and recoding of hypothesis information was studied in children in Grades 3, 5, and 7, and college students. Each S was tested on several two-choice discrimination problems. A problem consisted of two trials, a training trial and a test trial. The information available for coding on the first trial was varied in three series of problems by using pairs of stimuli differing in 3, 4, or 6 dimensions. Recoding after an error was facilitated in half of the problems in each series by allowing the stimuli to persist briefly after response and feedback. The stimuli terminated immediately after response and feedback in the remaining problems. The second trial of a problem, in which the stimuli differed on only one dimension, was used to probe for the information coded or recoded on the first trial. On the average, fewer dimensions were coded per trial by the younger Ss than by the older Ss. Neither the effects of negative feedback nor the effects of stimulus persistence were found to be related to developmental level. It was concluded that a deficiency in young children's ability to code, but not recode, hypothesis information contributes to their less efficient performance in discrimination problems. |