Learning about the Physical World Flashcards

1
Q

Cognitive Development

A
  • How does children’s knowledge and thinking change as they grow?
  • What factors influence changes in their thinking?

3 main views:
* Piaget’s theory
* Nativist view
* Learning from the environment

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2
Q

Piaget’s Theory of
Cognitive Development

A

Jean Piaget
* Father of field of cognitive development
* In 1920, worked at the Binet Institute on
intelligence tests
- Piaget intrigued by children’s wrong answers
* Piaget proposed that:
- Children’s thinking is qualitatively different
from adults’ thinking
- Cognition grows and develops through a series of stages

Properties of Piaget’s Stage Theory
* Children at different stages think in qualitatively different ways
* Thinking at each stage influences thinking across diverse topics
* Brief transitional period at the end of each stage
* The stages are universal (not culture dependent) and the order is
always the same

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
1- Sensory motor stage: birth to 2 years
2- Preoperational stage: 2-7 years
3- Concrete operational stage: 7-11 years
4- Formal operational stage: 12+

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3
Q

Piaget: Sensory Motor Stage (0-2 years)

A
  • Infants live in the here-and-now
  • Gain knowledge about the world through movements and sensations

1 - 4 month olds: Interact with world via
reflexes and repeat pleasurable actions
- Indicates interest in own bodies
4 - 8 month olds: Repeat actions towards objects to produce a desired outcome
- Indicates interest in the world, beyond own body
- Allows for formation of connections between own actions and consequences in the world
8 - 12 month olds: Combine several actions to achieve a goal
- Indicates that actions are clearly intentional
- Emergence of object permanence

Object Permanence
* Knowing that objects continue to exist even though they can no
longer be seen or heard
- Develops around 8 months
- Tested by seeing how a baby reacts to an object being hidden
* If doesn’t look for object or gets upset = no object permanence
* If looks for object = developed object permanence
* A-not-B-error: tendency to reach for a hidden object where it was
last found rather than in the new location where it was last hidden
- Evidence that initial object permanence is fragile
- Disappears around 12 months of age

12 - 18 month olds: Trial-and-error experiments to see how outcome changes
- E.g. Varying the height from which an object is dropped
- Allows for greater understanding of cause-effect relations
18 - 24 month olds: Mental representation
- Fully developed object permanence
- Indicated by deferred imitation
- Allows for symbolic thoughts

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4
Q

Piaget: Preoperational stage (2-7 years)

A
  • Symbolic thought: The ability to think about objects or events that are not within the immediate environment
  • Enables language acquisition
  • Ability to use symbolic representation : Evidenced through ability to engage in pretend play and drawing
  • Egocentrism: Perceiving the world solely from one’s own point of view
  • Examples:
  • difficulties taking another person’s spatial perspective
  • egocentric speech
  • Sign of progress = increase in children’s verbal arguments
  • Means that a child is at least paying attention to another perspective

Egocentric Speech
* Jenny: My bunny slippers are brown and red. And they have eyes and
ears and these noses that wiggle.
* Chris: I have a piece of sugar in a red piece of paper. I’m gonna eat it
but maybe it’s for a horse.
* Jenny: We bought them. My mommy did. We couldn’t find the old
ones. These are like the old ones. They were not in the trunk.
* Chris: Can’t eat the piece of sugar, not unless you take the paper off

  • Centration: tendency to focus on a single, perceptually striking feature of an object or event to the exclusion of other relevant
    features
  • difficulties with conservation concept: merely changing the appearance of an object does not change the objects’ other key properties
    ex: two glasses with same amount of water, pour one of them in a taller glass. Child thinks now one glass has more water than the other.
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5
Q

Piaget: Concrete Operational Stage (Ages 7-12)

A
  • Can reason logically about concrete objects and events
  • E.g., understand conservation concept
  • Reversibility: the capacity to think through a series of steps and then mentally reverse direction, returning to the starting point
  • Seriation: the ability to order items along a quantitative dimension, such as length or weight
  • Cognitive maps: the mental representation of familiar large-scale
    spaces, such as their neighbourhood and school
  • Cannot think in purely abstract/hypothetical terms or generate
    systematic scientific experiments to test their beliefs
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6
Q

Piaget: Formal Operational Stage (Ages 12 and Up)

A
  • Ability to think abstractly and to reason hypothetically
  • Not universal
  • Not all adolescents or adults reach it
  • Can imagine realities that are different than the current one
  • Allows them to be interested in politics, ethics, science fiction, and to
    reason scientifically

Piaget’s Pendulum Problem
* Test of deductive reasoning
* Determine the influence of weight and string length on the time it takes for the pendulum to swing back and forth
* Unbiased experiments require varying only one variable at a time
* Children under 12 perform unsystematic
experiments and draw incorrect conclusions

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7
Q

Piaget summary of stages and other things

A

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
Sensorimotor (birth – 2 years old):
* Infants acquire knowledge purely through their senses and actions
* By the end of this stage, achieve object permanence
Preoperational (2-7 years old):
* Symbolic thought
* Thinking characterized by egocentrism and centration
Concrete Operational (7-12 years old):
* Begin to think logically about concrete objects
* Can see the world from other perspectives
* Understand that events are influenced by multiple factors
Formal Operational (12 years old and up):
* Can think systemically and abstractly

Piaget on How Children Learn
* Children actively shape their knowledge of the world
-Not passive
-Children have ideas about the world, perform experiments, and draw
conclusions from observations
* Children learn on their own
-Do not depend on instruction from others
* Children are intrinsically motivated to learn
-Do not require rewards from other people

Strengths of Piaget’s Theory
* Intuitively plausible depiction of children’s nature as active learners and how learning progresses
* Provides a good overview of children’s thinking at different ages
* Exceptional breadth
- Spans the lifespan
- Examines many cognitive operations and concepts

Applications of Piaget’s Theory to
Education
* Children’s distinctive ways of thinking at different ages need to be
considered in deciding how to teach them
- E.g., cannot teach kids in concrete operational state about calculus
* Children learn best by interacting with the environment
- Hands-on learning
- Experiments

Weaknesses of Piaget’s Theory
* Piaget didn’t use scientific method to develop theory
* Theory depicts children’s thinking as more consistent than it is
* Children are more cognitively competent than Piaget recognized
* Theory is vague about the mechanisms of cognitive growth
* Theory underestimates the contribution of the social world to cognitive development

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8
Q

Nativist view

A
  • Children have innate, specialized cognitive mechanisms that provide
    them with basic knowledge in domains of evolutionary importance
  • These cognitive mechanisms also allow children to rapidly acquire
    additional knowledge in these important domains
  • Domains of evolutionary importance:
  • Solid objects
  • Understanding of physical laws
  • Numbers
  • Categorization
  • Understanding the minds of people
  • Language
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9
Q

Nativist view: understanding solid objects

A

Evidence for Earlier Object Permanence
* When shown an object and then the light in the room is turned off, most infants younger than 8 months old will reach for where they last saw the object
- Suggests that they still expect it to be there
* Piaget’s object permanence task may be too difficult
- Infants younger than 8 months old may fail Piaget’s object permanence
task because haven’t developed the motor capacity to manually search
* Can use looking behaviour as a better measure of object permanence
- i.e., violation-of-expectation paradigm

Violation-of-Expectation Paradigm
* Adaptation of habituation paradigm used to study infant cognition
* Infants are habituated to an event
* Test: presented with a possible and impossible event that are
variations on the habituation event
- Possible event: consistent with knowledge or expectation being
examined in the study
- Impossible event: violates knowledge or expectation being studied
* Longer looking at the impossible event indicates that the infant possesses the physical knowledge being studied
- Impossible event is viewed as more novel/ unexpected

Drawbridge Study
* Results: Infants as young as 3.5 months old looked longer at the
impossible event (drawbridge going through a box) than the possible
event
* Indicates that infants as young as 3.5 months:
- have object permanence
- understand that solid objects can’t go through another solid object
* Implications: Since 3.5 month olds haven’t learned language yet and couldn’t have been taught, suggests that understanding of solid objects is innate

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10
Q

Nativist view: understanding physical laws

A

Infant Understanding of Gravity
* Do infants understand gravity?
* Study: Violation of expectation paradigm with 3 month olds:
-a hand places a box on a platform
-a hand places a box in midair and it
remains suspended
* Which event do the infants look at longer?
* Results: 3 month olds looked longer at the box suspended in midair
* Follow-up study:
* Compared looking times at:
- a box suspended in midair (same impossible event) vs.
- a box that falls when placed in midair
* Infants looked longer at box suspended in midair
* Shows that infants expect the box to fall if there is no support
* Since infants haven’t learned language yet, suggests innate, rudimentary understanding of gravity

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11
Q

Nativist view: understanding numbers

A

Infants’ Understanding of Numbers
* Do infants have a basic concept of numbers?
* Study: Habituation paradigm with 6 month olds
* Habituation: shown a series of displays containing 16 dots
- Dots of different sizes and arrangement on each display
* Test:
- Same number: 16 dots
- New number: 8 dots
* Which display do children look at longer?
* Results: Infants looked longer at the new number display
* Follow-up studies show that 6 month olds show the same behaviour for
other dots in a 2:1 ratio
- E.g. can detect the difference between 20 dots and 10 dots
* 9 months old: discriminate displays in a 3:2 ratio (e.g. 12 vs. 8 dots)
* Since infants haven’t learned to count yet, suggests that they have an
innate approximate number sense (ANS)
- Cognitive system that allows infants to intuitively estimate numbers and
magnitudes

Approximate Number Sense (ANS)
* Are there more black dots than white dots?

Foundations of Differences in Math Ability?
* Research shows a positive correlation between infant ANS and
preschool math ability
* Suggests that ANS lays the foundation for later math ability

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12
Q

Nativist view: categorization

A
  • Categorization begins in infancy
  • Habituation paradigm:
  • Showed 3 month olds various pictures of cats
  • Habituated to the general category of cat
  • Looked at novel cat photos less and less
  • Test: photo of a dog
  • Results: Infants looked longer at the dog
  • Suggests that infants saw all the cats as a
    single category and the dog as a different
    category
  • Infants also form more general categories than “cat”
  • Study:
  • Habituation: 6 month olds habituated to photos of mammals
  • Then, on test trial, looked longer at non-mammals (i.e., bird or fish)
  • Shows that infants had formed category of mammal by recognizing
    similarities between mammals

3 Broad Categories
* 9-month-olds divide objects into 3 broad categories
* 9-month-olds distinguish between people, animals, and inanimate
objects:
* Indexed by different reactions to members of each of these categories
- E.g., in lab settings, 9 month olds pay more attention to animals than
inanimate objects, but smile less at animals than they do at people

Importance of Categorization
* Helps makes sense of the world by simplifying it
* Allows children to make inferences and predictions about objects of
the same category
- E.g., If a child learns that a giraffe is an animal, knows that it breathes,
moves, eats

Forming Categories Based on Shape
* Infants focus on similarities in shape when forming categories
* Study:
- Various objects placed in front of 12 month olds
- Experimenter picked up target object and
demonstrated that it rattles
* Infants were more likely to assume that an object of a similar shape also rattles vs. objects similar in colour or texture
* Focus on similarities in shape results in difficulties understanding exceptions
- E.g. Infants fail to categorize a snail as an animal because don’t have legs
- Fail to understand that a boat is a vehicle because lacks wheels

Object Categorization Beyond Infancy
* By 2-3 years of age, children start to form category hierarchies
* Category hierarchies: organize object categories by set-subset relations
- Allow for finer distinctions among objects within each level
-superordinate level (general, like plant), basic level (medium, like tree), subordinate level (specific, like oak)
* Children usually learn basic level first
- Objects at the basic level have obvious similarities
* Similarities at superordinate level are less obvious and differences between subordinate levels are hard to detect

Summary of Categorization
* Categorization starts in infancy
* By 9 months of age, infants differentiate people, animals, and inanimate objects
* By 2-3 years of age, form category hierarchies
* Early categories are based on perceptual similarities, especially similarities in shape
* Children learn basic categories before they learn superordinate and
subordinate categories

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13
Q

Summary of Nativist View

A
  • According to nativists, children have innate, specialized cognitive
    mechanisms that provide them with basic knowledge in domains of
    evolutionary importance
  • Research shows that infants as young as 3 - 6 months old have an innate,
    basic understanding of:
  • Object permanence and object solidity
  • Physical laws, like gravity and motion through external force
  • Approximate number sense
  • Categorization
  • Suggests that infants are a lot more cognitively capable than Piaget
    thought
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14
Q

Criticism of Nativist View

A
  • Over-estimate infants’ innate, cognitive understanding
  • Findings of nativist studies can instead be explained by:
  • Perceptual features of stimuli
  • Infants may look longer at certain stimuli because they are more visually
    interesting (i.e., more complex or novel), and not because they have innate
    expectations about the stimuli
  • Learning from the environment
  • 3 month olds have learned a lot about the world in about 810 hours of awake
    time
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15
Q

How do children learn from the environment? Caregivers

A
  • Caregivers play a role in children’s learning by determining the
    quality of the home environment

Measuring the Home Environment
* Home Observation for the Measurement of the Environment (HOME)
* Gold standard
* Researchers visit a child’s home and observe the environment and
interview the caregiver
* Checklist of characteristics that reflect 2 factors:
- Parenting quality: Responsiveness, acceptance, involvement
- Stimulation of environment: variety and presence of interesting toys
* Higher scores indicate higher quality home environment

Home Environment Matters A LOT
* Higher scores on the HOME positively predict children’s cognitive
skills and development
- IQ
- Math and reading comprehension
- Language ability
* Parenting quality is most important factor

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16
Q

Learning from the environment. How do children learn from the environment? Statistical Learning

A
  • Children actively learn from the environment on their own
  • Trial and error
  • Statistical learning

Statistical Learning
* The ability to track patterns in the environment
Example of observational learning
* Study: Habituation-paradigm with 2 month olds
* Habituated to sequence of 3 pairs of shapes
- First shape in a pair always came before the second shape in the pair
* Test:
- Familiar sequence: same pairs of shapes
- Novel sequence: randomly ordering the same shapes (no pattern)
* Results: 2 month olds looked longer at the novel sequence
- Suggests that they had learned the order of shapes in the habituation
phase
- Evidence of infants are sensitive to statistical regularities in their
environment

Implications of Statistical Learning
* Babies are actively interpreting the world around them and drawing conclusions
* Statistical learning is innate and domain general
- Mechanism through which infants learn in various domains
- Contrast with nativist theory which assert existence of innate, domain
specific learning mechanisms

17
Q

Factors influencing home environment

A
  • Socioeconomic status (SES)
  • Low SES associated with lower quality home environment
  • Culture
  • Determines the specific contents of what a child learns
  • BUT process through which children learn is universal : Children everywhere benefit from accepting/involved parents and
    stimulating environments
18
Q

Summary

A
  • Piaget’s theory:
  • Cognitive development occurs in qualitatively, distinct stages
  • Nativist view:
  • Emphasizes innate knowledge and specialized learning mechanisms in
    domain of evolutionary importance
  • Learning view:
  • Children learn a great deal from the environment through trial and error
    and statistical learning
  • Quality of home environment affects cognitive development