Ch 7
tertiary circular reactions
Piaget's fifth substage of the sensorimotor period, in which infants try different schemes to discover the effects of those actions
sensorimotor intelligence
Piaget's first stage of cognitive development, from birth to 24 months of age
reflex schemes
Piaget's first substage of the sensorimotor period, in which infants respond to the world with a limited set of predated behaviors
coordination of secondary schemes
Piaget's fourth substage of the sensorimotor period, in which infants perform two separate scheme in order to produce a desired outcome
preoperational thought
Piaget's second stage of congested development from 2 to 6 years age
primary circular reactions
Piaget's second substage of the sensorimotor period, in which sensory and motor schemes are activated by chance
mental combinations
Piaget's sixth substage of the sensorimotor period, in which infants are able to think about their actions and select schemes in order to achieve a desired outcome
schemes
Piaget's term for actions used to explore and interact with the physical environment
accommodation
Piaget's term for adjusting exploratory actions in response to an object's novel characteristics
assimilation
Piaget's term for employing previously used actions to explore an object
object permanence
Piaget's term for infants' gradually developing understanding that objects continue to exist even when they are not in sensory or motor contact with them
egocentric
Piaget's term for infants' tendency to understand the world through their own sensory and motor acts
a-not-b error
Piaget's term for the tendency, first seen around 8 months of age, for infants to search for objects at locations from which they previously successfully retrieved objects, even though they saw the object being hidden at a different location
secondary circular reactions
Piaget's third substage of the sensorimotor period, in which infants repeat schemes in order to achieve specific outcomes
zone of proximal development (ZPD)
Vygotsky's term for the distance between a child's ability to solve a problem alone and how much better the child can solve the problem when guided or assisted by a more capable individual
gaze following
a characteristic of social interaction in which one person shifts his or her visual attention in the direction of another person has turned to look
theory of mind (ToM)
a cognitive achievement that emerges around the age of 3 years, enabling children to understand others' feelings and beliefs
short-term memory
a limited storage system that holds information for only a few seconds if the information is not actively rehearsed
enabling relations
a logically or practically necessary order between steps in a sequence
Bayley Scales of Infant Development
a measure that is used to assess infant intelligence through motor, mental, and behavior rating scales
violation-of-expectation procedure
a procedure in which infants are shown possible and impossible events in order to test their understanding of physical phenomena and object properties
play
activity that is intrinsically motivated focused on means rather than ends, different from purely exploratory behavior, nonliteral, and free from externally applied rules
representational insight
awareness of the relation between a space and a symbol for that space
explicit memory
conscious awareness of specific information, such as events and facts
long-term memory
information that is stored and available to be retrieved repeatedly over time
guided participation
patterns of social interaction and structured activity during joint problem solving involving people with different levels of skills and knowledge
pretend/symbolic play
play that emerges after 12 months of age, in which children behave in a nonliteral way
sociocultural contexts
settings in which children spend time, including home, childcare, and school
joint attention
shared perceptual exploration during social interaction, in which gaze alternates between some aspect of the environment and another person involved in the interaction
allocentric framework
spatial orientation that is based on external cues in the environment
egocentric framework
spatial orientation that is based on one's own body and physical actions
arbitrary relations
steps in a sequence that may be performed in any order because they are not logically or practically linked
categorization
the ability to group aspects of the world according to shared attributes
recall memory
the ability to remember a previously presented stimulus or event in the absence of ongoing perceptual support
recognition memory
the ability to remember a previously presented stimulus or event when it is presented at a later time
deferred imitation
the ability to remember and repeat an action that was observed earlier in the absence of a model for those actions
mental representation
the ability to remember and think about objects and events, even when those objects and events are not physically present
scaffolding
the process through which more capable individuals structure tasks to boost less capable individual's performance
implicit memory
unconscious learning, including conditioning and aspects of motor learning
egocentric speech
verbal behavior that is directed toward oneself rather than others, with the purpose of enhancing concentration and performance during an activity