Children's early concepts of the physical world Flashcards
what is Piaget’s constructivist theory (Piaget, 1954)
- Chaotic perceptual input in early infancy
- Action is necessary for the child’s construction of knowledge
- Not enough to simply view people interacting with objects
- Late development of conceptual understanding about the world of objects
what is Nativism – Spelke, Baillargeon
- core knowledge hypothesis
- infants possess innate knowledge of object concepts
- this constitutes to the core of adult knowledge
- developmental change involves
a. refinement or core concepts (rather than their radical change) and further changes in additional abilities . e.g. experience fine-tunes knowledge about support
what are the core principles of natvism?
- solidarity- no two objects can occupy the same space at one time
- cohesion- objects are connected masses of stuff that move as a whole
- contact- objects move through contact (i.e. do not move spontaneously)
- continuity- objects move in continuous paths
what is Karmiloff-Smith (1992) theory of knowledge?
- Genes specify initial constraints/predispositions that channel attention to relevant environment inputs (both visual and physical interactions)
- Provide that infant with a non-chaotic system from the outset
- Lead to implicit understanding (not innate knowledge)
- Developmental change is necessary
○ Change from implicit to explicit within the domain of physical understanding (“representational redescription)
what is Piaget’s account of object permanence?
- object permanence = awareness that objects continue to exist even when they are no longer visible
- Piaget believed in late development of object permanence; acquired 8-9mo
what A not B error, Piaget?
- when the infant searches for a hidden object where they last found it (location A) rather than at its current location (location B)
- they believe by removing the cloth in location A the object will be made there
- Infants grow out of this at 8-12 months
Permanence and Solidarity study, Baillargeon et al. (1985) “Drawbridge study”
- wooden drawbridge that rotated 180 degrees
- habituation event was when it rotated the full way
- wanted to investigate if the infant could process the impossible event of a full rotation with a block in the way
- 5 month old infants looked longer at impossible event
- findings show that infants understand object continues to exist when hidden from view
- these findings challenge Piaget’s conclusions
what are alternative interpretations of Baillargeon et al. (1985) “Drawbridge study” ?
- perceptual persistence (Haith, 1998). When watching the drawbridge rise and obstruct the block, there was lingering activation of the block, ppts think they can still see it
- preference for events that display more motion (Rivera et al., 1999)
Permanence & Solidity, Baillargeon (1986): 6.5-8m-olds; Baillergeon & DeVos (1991): 3.5 m-olds
- 6 month old baby watch car go down a track
- car goes behind a screen and then the screen is lifted once the car has gone past
- screen is lowered and a block is placed on the track
- but the car still goes past as the block is lifted when behind the screen
- babies look longer at the impossible event (when the block is on the track) as they have an expectation of what should happen and an idea that the car shouldn’t go through the block
Squashy or hard? (Baillargeon, 1987)
- hidden objects
- 7.5m infants represent the properties of hidden objects: infants looked longer at the impossible event
- hard block vs squishy block
Infancy and beyond (impossible event) , Hood et al., 2000; Berthier et al., 2000
- infants 4 months old looked longer at an impossible event
- when a ball was dropped behind a screen and appeared at the bottom
- but then a shelf was introduced and placed behind the screen
- possible outcome: ball shown on top of shelf when screen removed
- impossible event: ball somehow managed to pass through the shelf and out the bottom
what are search errors?
- a discrepancy has been shown between early looking data and later search errors
- infants (and 2 yr olds) have knowledge but unable to use it to guide their actions
- suggests early cognitive development involves constructing knowledge-action links rather than constructing knowledge itself
what are some reasons for search errors?
- limited problem-solving abilities
- frontal cortex immaturity
- weaker representations that are sufficient to perform in looking tasks, but not in manual retrieval
- early representations are implicit
what is the model of cognitive development by Karmiloff-Smith (1992)
- children’s intelligence undergoes changes as they grow
- implicit procedural knowledge → representational re-description → explicit declarative knowledge
Infant can discriminate test events, what support these abilities?
- Innate core knowledge about object properties?
- Attentional biases that facilitate learning?
- A combination of both?