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Summary 5

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Summary for Developmental & Educational Psychology (IBP)

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2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 ,10, 11, 12, 13, 14
Subido en
6 de septiembre de 2018
Número de páginas
11
Escrito en
2017/2018
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How Children Develop – Chapter 5 – Seeing, Thinking, and Doing in Infancy

Percepton

Infants come to the world with all their sensory systems functoning to some degree and
that subsequent development occurs at a very rapid pace
 Sensation – the processing of basic informaton from the external world by the
sensory receptors in the sense organs and brain
 Perception – the process of organizing and interpretng sensory informaton

Vision
 Infants begin using their eyes to explore, as entering the world
 Vision is not as clear, but improves extremely rapidly in the frst moths
 Breakthrough in research of infant´s vision through: preferential looking technique –
a method for studying visual atenton in infants that involves showing infants two
paterns or two obeects at a tme to see if the infants have a preference for one over
the other (pioneered by Robert Fantz)
o Modern versions involve the use of automatc eye trackers
o Head-mounted infant eye trackers are also used, showing where infants are
looking as they move their eyes freely around the room
 Habituaton – the procedure involves repeatedly presentng an infant with a
partcular stmulus untl the infant´s response to it habituates

Visual Acuity and Color Percepton
Visual acuity – the sharpness of visual discriminaton
 Poor contrast sensitiiity – the ability to detect diferences in light and dark areas in a
visual patern  young infants prefer to look at paterns of high visual contrast
o Reason: immaturity of cones – the light sensitve neurons that are highly
concentrated in the fovea (the central region of the retna) and involved in
seeing fne detail and color
 infants catch only 2% of the light striking the fovea, compared to 65%
for adults
 Vision of 20/120  by 8 months of age, acuity approached that of
adults
 By 1 month of age  inability to diferentate between white and color (by 2 moths:
similar to adults)
 Infants prefer colors that are unique hues (blue) over colors that are combinatons of
hues (green-blue)
 Infants´ brains respond to a change in color in a diferent category, but not to a new
color in the same category  infants´ brains represent some color categories prior to
the acquisiton of language

Visual Scanning
Not untl 4 moths of age are infants able to track moving obeects smoothly, and then they´re
only able to do so if an obeect is moving slowly
 functon of maturaton

,  Preterm infants, whose neural and perceptual systems are immature, develop
smooth visual tracking later than full-term infants do
 Very preterm infants who have difculty tracking moving obeects at 4 months of
gestatonal age show poorer cognitve outcomes at 3 years of age than similarly
preterm infants
 Visual scanning is important, because it is one way infants have actve control over
what they observe and learn
o By 1 month of age: infants looking at a line drawing of a face, they tend to
fxate on the perimeter – on the hairline or chin  relatvely high contrast
with the background
o By 2 months of age: infants scan much more broadly, pay atenton to overall
shape and inner details
 Talking faces  enables them to draw connectons between the motor actons and
sounds that will be the basis for their eventual natve language
o At 4 months of age (before the onset of productve speech), infants watching
talking faces primarily  fxate eyes
o After startng babbling  fxate mouth
 shift earlier for bilingual infants

Obeect Percepton

Perceptual constancy – the percepton of obeects as being of constant in size, shape, and
color, etc. in spite of physical diferences in the retnal image of the obeect
(origin was a traditonal component in the debates between empiricists and natvists)
 Natvist view  supported by evidence of perceptual constancy in newborns and
very young infants (experiment: infants had perceived the multple presentatons of
the original cube as a single obeect of a constant size, even though its retnal size
varied)

Object segregation – the identfcaton of separate obeects in a visual array
 moton as a cue indicatng the boundaries between obeects (initally demonstrated by
Kellman and Spelke – rod experiment  infants perceive the two rod segments as
parts of a unitary obeect)
o common movement – leads infants to perceive disparate elements moving
together as parts of a unitary obeect ( must be learned, evident at 2 months
of age, when task is simplifed)
 general knowledge about the world, is used for obeect segregaton, as infants become
older
o experience with specifc obeects helps infants to understand their physical
propertes
o culture infuences atenton to the visual world
 Western Caucasian adults  more likely to make use of informaton in
the mouth & to focus on the focal obeects in a scene
 East Asian adults  more likely to make use of informaton in the eyes
& to fxate on the actons and background contexts of the scene
 Patern of face percepton emerges by 7 months of age
 Diferent paterns of visual atenton are displayed by 24 moths of age
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