Core knowledge theories: L5 Flashcards
Piaget: sensorimotor
birth - 2 years
Understands the world through senses and action
Piaget: pre-operational
2 task examples
2-7 years
Understands world through symbols and mental images
- Three-mountain task - under 6 y/o difficulty in separating perspective from others
- Egocentrism
Piaget: concrete operational
7-12 years
Understands world though logical thinking and categories
-> conservation of liquid & solid quantity achieved by 7
Piaget: formal operational
12 years+
Understands world through hypothetical thinking and scientific reasoning
Piaget: sensorimotor
- simple: object permanence
- changed hiding place
- invisible displacement
- 0-5 months = toy hidden under towel, no active search
6-9 months = active search, indicating mental representation/memory - 8-12 months = toy placed under towel A numerous times. Then placed under towel B. child still reaches for towel A
10-12 months = mastered mental representation - 12-18 months = researcher hides toy in hand, moves under a napkin. Child looks for the toy in the hand not napkin
18 months = mastered mental representation
Piaget:
1. Positives (3)
- good overview of children’s thinking at different points
- broad spectrum of development and ages
- fascinating observations
Piaget:
2. Negatives (3)
- stage model depicts children’s thinking as more consistent than it is
- Infants are more cognitively competent that Piaget recognised
- Piaget’s theory is vague about the cognitive processes giving rise to children’s thinking & about the mechanisms that produce cognitive growth
Core Knowledge theories: domain specific (overview + 2 main researchers)
-> what is the starter kit?
- Spelke and Kinzler (2007)
- babies are born with innate theories about objects, actions, biology, number, space
- This is part of what is called the “starter kit”
Core knowledge:
Habituation, dishabituation paradigm
(possible + impossible outcome)
= interaction of objects, looking at child’s understanding of object permanency
- infant becomes upset by an impossible event (screen passes through a box)
- novel event elicits longer looking time, faster heart rate (reacting to change)
= mentally represented the presence of the invisible box (object permanence)
Core knowledge:
observational learning, knowing the number of things
(possible + impossible outcome)
- object placed behind screen, second added
(a) screen drops & reveals 2 objects
(b) screen drops & reveals 1 object
(b) = elicited longer looking time & infant became distressed
Core knowledge systems are limited in 3 ways
- Domain specific = each system represents only a small subset of things perceived by the infant
- Task specific = each system solves a limited set of problems
- Encapsulated = each system operates independently
Core (initial) knowledge: 6 suggestions
- emerges early in development
- domain specific
- constrained
- innate
- constitutes the core of mature knowledge
- task specific
Differences,
- what Piaget didn’t have compared to core knowledge: starter kit
- what we have/believe now
- contemporary research tools (change in methodology)
- didn’t focus on evolutionary constraints
- not specific, very general
- contemporary research tools (change in methodology)
- brain responsivity to changes within the environment
- we have a basic set of mechanisms supporting development
- we are evolutionary pre-disposed to interact with our world in a particular way
- brain responsivity to changes within the environment
The brain:
- spurts
- weight at birth & 2 y/o
- spurts may coincide with important changes in cognitive development
- at birth brain is 25% of adult weight , at 2 its 75% of its adult weight
Overview of sensorimotor stage (6 substages)
- birth-1m
- modify reflexes
- centered on own body - 1-4m
- organise reflexes
- integrate actions - 4-8m
- repetition of actions = pleasurable/interesting results
- object permanence - 8-12m
- search for hidden object
- fragile mental representations
- A-not-B error - 12-18m
- active exploration of potential use of object - 18-24 months
- enduring mental representations