Ch 5
goals & intentions
15 month olds can make inferences about what a person will do based on the knowledge of what the person knows expect reach for teddy bear when moved- stare longer
what is CC
A form of learning that consists of associating an initial stimulus with a stimulus that always evokes a particular reflexive response
differentiation
A key process in perceptual learning Children extract from the constantly changing stimulation and events in the environment the relation between the elements that are constant—invariable or stable.
Unconditional response (UCR):
A reflexive response that is elicited by the UCS
Unconditional stimulus (UCS):
A stimulus that evokes a reflexive response
statistical learning
A type of learning involving picking up information from the environment and detecting statistically predictable patterns When regularity and predictability of objects, events, and other stimuli is violated, infants take notice.
scale errors
Attempts by young children to perform an action on a miniature object that is impossible due to the large discrepancy in the relative sizes of the child and the object eg. toy car, chair
pre reaching movements
Clumsy swiping movements by young infants toward the general vicinity of objects they see
Habituation
Decline in response to an object get bored fast
perceptual narrowing of sound
Developmental changes in which experience fine-tunes the perceptual system respond to rhythm in music 9months perceiving whats in own culture
facial preferences - attractiveness
From birth onward, infants look longer at and interact more positively with faces that adults find more attractive
violation of expectancy
Infants are shown an event that should evoke surprise or interest. The event violates something the infants know or assume to be true. In experimental situations, infants as young as 3 1⁄2 months looked longer at impossible events than at possible events.
touch
Infants learn about their environments through touch. Oral exploration is dominant in infants. Around the age of 4 months, infants rub, finger, probe, and bang objects. Their actions become specific to the properties of the objects. They develop mental maps of their own bodies.
sound preferences
Infants prefer infant-directed singing over adult-directed singing. Infants prefer infant-directed singing over adult-directed speech. Infant music perception is adultlike. Infants prefer consonant (soft) music as opposed to dissonant music. happy over angry voices
social knowledge
Infants understand that the behaviour of others is purposive and goal-directed.
early pioneers:
Infants' motor development is governed by brain maturation.
infants and intermodal perception
Information from different sense modalities is initially perceived as separate. It unifies gradually. Infants can connect between sights and sounds. Infants can connect between what they have seen and felt (touched).
motor development -reflexes
Innate fixed patterns of action that occur in response to particular stimulation
what are cones
Light-sensitive neurons that are highly concentrated in the fovea (the central region of the retina) - 20/120 vision, distance is progressive
current theorists, Motor development results from confluence of
Neural mechanisms Increases in infants' strength Posture control Balance Perceptual skills Changes in body proportions Motivation
thelen and colleagues
Normal disappearance of the stepping reflex is not caused by cortical maturation Movement pattern (and its neural basis) remains but is masked by the changing ratio of leg weight to strength chubby babies (h20) vs slimmer babies (Weight)
what is auditory localization
Perception of the location in space of a sound source. This improves as the infant grows.
newborns pictorial
Recognize 2D versions of 3D objects
taste and smell
Sensitivity to taste develops prenatally. Newborns prefer sweet flavours. Newborns prefer the smell of breast milk. Infants can recognize the smell of their mothers from the smell of other women.
what is visual acuity
Sharpness of visual discrimination • Simple versus complex patterns age 6- same as adult
motor developments in newborns
Some reflexes have clear adaptive value Others have no known adaptive significance neonatal reflex, rooting, sucking, tonic neck, moro
zelazo and colleagues of stepping reflex
Stepping reflex continued to show after 2 months when infants given practice; cortical maturation cannot account for vanishing
early theory of stepping reflex
Stepping reflex typically disappears around 2 months of age as result of cortical maturation
what is contrast sensitivity
The ability to detect differences in light and dark areas in a visual pattern High-contrasting patterns versus low-contrasting patterns
self locomotion
The ability to move oneself around in the environment practice vital
what is intermodal perception
The combining of information from two or more sensory systems
What is binocular disparity
The differences between retinal image of an object in each eye that results in two slightly diff signals being sent to the brain more disparity when closer
what is object segregation
The identification of separate objects in a visual array
Conditioned response (CR):
The originally reflexive response that comes to be elicited by the CS
what is perceptual constancy
The perception of objects as being of constant size, shape, colour, and so on, in spite of physical differences in the retinal image of the object Children have size constancy. Experience is not necessary for it.
what are affordances
The possibilities for action offered, or afforded, by objects and situations
Conditioned stimulus (CS):
The stimulus that is repeatedly paired with the UCS
obj segregation- culture
Uk more emphasis on looking at mouths Japan - eyes fish tank - americans big fish, collectivist - context
cross-culture research of pictorial
Understanding relationship between 2D images and 3D objects requires experience with pictorial media exposure- not as developed in peru , rural india
imitating intentions
When 18-month-olds see a person apparently try, but fail, to pull the ends off a dumbbell, they imitate pulling the ends off - the action the person intended to do, not what the person actually did. They do not imitate a mechanical device at all
what is optical expansion
When the visual image of an object increases in size as the object comes toward us, occluding more and more in the background
facial preferences
With experience, infants develop preference for the type of face they see most often and begin to understand the significance of different facial expressions
pictorial representations
Young children and adults perceive pictures in similar ways but understanding of meaning develops later
positive reinforcement
a reward that reliably follows a behavior and increases the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated
Rational learning Xu
ability to use prior experiences to predict what will occur in the future ping pong balls with babies used violation of expectancy procedure 70 white:5 red - ifi 4 red & 1 white = v.o.e
auditory perception
age 5/6 , same as adult hearing is most advanced in newborns
what is colour perception
appears 2 months of age. Infants prefer unique hues over hue combinations. There is evidence of colour categories in infants' brains. Colour categorization is present before language acquisition.
19 months
appreciation of the symbolic nature of 2D objects
other race effect (ORE)
by 3 months there is a pref for same race by 6 months - can make distinction bt faces by 9 months- better at discriminating own race driven by experience & surroundings (perceptual narrowing)
why do infants have low acuity
cones are not fully developed only 2% of light getting into fovea
7 month old - scanning
detect subjective contour (circles make shape)
degree to which motor skills are encouraged varieties culture to culture
early locomotion actively discouraged ( modern urban china; anche of rain forest of paraguay ) early locomotion actively encouraged (kipsigis of rural kenya; groups in west africa and west india ) regardless of exposure- similar sequence
reaching results in
in visual development and motor development. Reaching behaviour enhances several aspects of infants' understanding of the world around them.
around 8 months self locomotion
infants become capable of self locomotion for the first time as they crawl
around 11 to 12 months locomotion
infants begin walking independently , using toddling gait
physical knowledge
infants knowledge about the physical world is not limited to what they know and are learning about objects. knowledge of gravity begins in the first year infants gradually understand under what conditions one object can support another Even in the first year, infants can understand that objects do not float in midair (Baillargeon, 1998)
visual acuity in young infants
involves sharpness of visual discrimination can be estimated by comparing how long infant looks at research patterns infants prefer to look at patterns of high visual contrast infants have poor contrast sensitivity
active learning
learning by acting on the world, rather than passively observing objects and events
instrumental (operant) conditioning
learning the relation between one's own behavior and the consequences that result from it
observational learning/imitation
learning through observation or other people's behavior mirror neuron
what is preferential technique
method for studying visual attention in infants
Experience with specific objects helps infants understand their physical properties. - obj segregation
movement is powerful perception cue eg. w/out movement infants cant see solid rod - see two
visual scanning & pattern perception
newborns scan environments 2 month old infants can track & analyze & integrate separate elements of a visual display into coherent pattern
what is stereopsis
process by which the visual cortex combines the differing neural signals caused by binocular disparity
7 months reaching
reaching becomes stable when infants sit independently.
five month old pictorial
recognize people & object in pictures & drawings
age and colour perception
respond in change in category (blue - red) - age 5 months
what is the visual cliff
role experience and social referencing understanding & learning = more experience they know more / wont or will be harmed
what does preferential technique involve
showing infants two patterns or two objects at a time Preference of one object over another measured expectation that babies look longer @ objects they find interesting
rational learning
the ability to use prior experiences to predict what will occur in the future
monocular depth (pictorial cues)
the perceptual cues of depth (eg. relative size & interposition) that can be perceived by one eye alone eg. forground vs background 7 months
What is perception
the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, about objects and events, world around us under age 7 - trouble seeing both duck and rabbit - convinced theyre correct
what is sensation
the processing of basic information from the world through the sense organs (eyes, skin, ears, etc)
how can newborns hearing be checked
with advanced equipment, but screening is needed for hearing loss that may occur later. As a check, does a child react to loud sounds, imitate sounds—as in peekaboo—or begin to respond to his or her name?