Chapter 5 Conitive Development
Chapter 5 Conitive Development
PIAGETIAN APPROACH
Perceptual Process
INFORMATION-PROCESSING APPROACH
Cross-modal transfer - Ability to use
HABITUATION
information gained by one sense to guide
-type of learning in which familiarity with a another.
stimulus reduces, slows or stops a response. Joint attention - A shared attentional focus,
Familiarity breeds loss of interest. typically initiated with eye gaze or pointing.
DISHABITUATION – increase in
responsiveness after presentation of a new
The capacity for joint attention—which is of
stimulus.
fundamental importance to social interaction,
language acquisition, and the understanding of
others’ intentions and mental states— develops
between 10 and 12 months, when babies follow
an adults’ gaze by looking or pointing in the
same direction.
Number
Piaget believed that at about 4 to 6 months, as
infants become able to grasp objects, they In one classic study, infants watched as Mickey
begin to recognize they can act on their Mouse dolls were placed behind a screen, and a
environment. However, he believed they did doll was either added or taken away. The
not yet know that causes must come before screen then was lifted to reveal either the
effects and that forces outside of themselves number of dolls that should have been there or
can make things happen. He maintained that a different number of dolls.
this understanding develops slowly during Babies looked longer at surprising―wrongǁ
infants’ 1st year. answers than at expected―rightǁ ones,
suggesting that they had mentally computed the
right answers.
Object Permanence
5 objects, +5 more objects:
When Piaget investigated object permanence, □Infants looked longer when the screen
he used infants’ motor responses to gauge dropped to show 5 than 10.
whether or not infants understood that a hidden Moreover, in preschool, the ability to
object still existed. Their failure to reach for estimate approximate numbers is related to
the hidden object was interpreted to mean they later mathematical achievement, suggesting
did not. continuity in this process.
Violation-of-expectations – research method
in which dishabituation to a stimulus that
conflicts with experience is taken as evidence
that an infant recognizes the new stimulus as
surprising.
Evaluating Information Processing Research Once children know words, they can use them
to represent objects and actions. They can
Some theorists argue we must be wary of
reflect on people, places, and things; and they
overestimating infants’ cognitive abilities from
can communicate their needs, feelings, and
data that may have simpler explanations.
ideas in order to exert more control over their
They argue that an infant’s visual interest in an
lives.
impossible condition may reveal a perceptual
awareness that something unusual has
happened rather than a conceptual
understanding of the way things work. For
instance, if an infant looks longer at one scene
than another, it may just be because the two
scenes look different from each other rather
than because of any conceptual processes.
Language Development