Literature DB >> 21058828

Priming 4.5-month-old infants to use height information by enhancing retrieval.

Su-hua Wang1.   

Abstract

How do infants select and use information that is relevant to the task at hand? Infants treat events that involve different spatial relations as distinct, and their selection and use of object information depends on the type of event they encounter. For example, 4.5-month-olds consider information about object height in occlusion events, but infants typically fail to do so in containment events until they reach the age of 7.5 months. However, after seeing a prime involving occlusion, 4.5-month-olds became sensitive to height information in a containment event (Experiment 1). The enhancement lasted over a brief delay (Experiment 2) and persisted even longer when infants were shown an additional occlusion prime but not an object prime (Experiment 3). Together, these findings reveal remarkable flexibility in visual representations of young infants and show that their use of information can be facilitated not by strengthening object representations per se but by strengthening their tendency to retrieve available information in the representations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21058828     DOI: 10.1037/a0021060

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


  2 in total

1.  Catastrophic individuation failures in infancy: A new model and predictions.

Authors:  Maayan Stavans; Yi Lin; Di Wu; Renée Baillargeon
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  2018-12-13       Impact factor: 8.934

2.  How do the object-file and physical-reasoning systems interact? Evidence from priming effects with object arrays or novel labels.

Authors:  Yi Lin; Jie Li; Yael Gertner; Weiting Ng; Cynthia L Fisher; Renée Baillargeon
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 3.468

  2 in total

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