Literature DB >> 19840053

Object permanence and method of disappearance: looking measures further contradict reaching measures.

Eric P Charles1, Susan M Rivera.   

Abstract

Piaget proposed that understanding permanency, understanding occlusion events, and forming mental representations were synonymous; however, accumulating evidence indicates that those concepts are not unified in development. Infants reach for endarkened objects at younger ages than for occluded objects, and infants' looking patterns suggest that they expect occluded objects to reappear at younger ages than they reach for them. We reaffirm the latter finding in 5- to 6-month-olds and find similar responses to faded objects, but we fail to find that pattern in response to endarkened objects. This suggests that looking behavior and reaching behavior are both sensitive to method of disappearance, but with opposite effects. Current cognition-oriented (i.e. representation-oriented) explanations of looking behavior cannot easily accommodate these results; neither can perceptual-preference explanations, nor the traditional ecological reinterpretations of object permanence. A revised ecological hypothesis, invoking affordance learning, suggests how these differences could arise developmentally.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19840053     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2009.00844.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Sci        ISSN: 1363-755X


  4 in total

1.  Quantifying the Relationship Between Infants' Haptic and Visual Response to Word-Object Pairings.

Authors:  Kristi Hendrickson; Margaret Friend
Journal:  Proc Annu Boston Univ Conf Lang Dev       Date:  2013-04

2.  Making Sense of Infants' Differential Responses to Incongruity.

Authors:  Gina C Mireault; Vasudevi Reddy
Journal:  Hum Dev       Date:  2020-09-17

3.  Adult humans' understanding of support relations: an up-linkage replication.

Authors:  Francisco J Silva; Merritt I Ten Hope; Ali L Tucker
Journal:  Learn Behav       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 1.926

Review 4.  Spatial Thinking in Infancy: Origins and Development of Mental Rotation Between 3 and 10 Months of Age.

Authors:  Scott P Johnson; David S Moore
Journal:  Cogn Res Princ Implic       Date:  2020-03-02
  4 in total

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