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Cognitive development Section 4.26. Quiz. 1.What do the ‘visual cliff’ experiments tell us about babies’ visual perception? 2.What is a ‘schema’ in Piaget’s.

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Presentation on theme: "Cognitive development Section 4.26. Quiz. 1.What do the ‘visual cliff’ experiments tell us about babies’ visual perception? 2.What is a ‘schema’ in Piaget’s."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cognitive development Section 4.26

2 Quiz. 1.What do the ‘visual cliff’ experiments tell us about babies’ visual perception? 2.What is a ‘schema’ in Piaget’s theory of Cognitive Development? 3.What is ‘theory of mind’? 4.What is ‘object permanence’? 5.Do infants know about gravity?

3 Cognitive Development. Q: What do kids know at different ages? How do we find out what they know? (Methods) What do we think they know? (Theories) What do they seem to know? (Results)

4 Methods (infants) Play studies –Kids do the darnedest things! Habituation –Get infant bored, then look for the infant to regain interest Eye-tracking –Find out where children are looking High-amplitude sucking ERP

5 Habituation

6 Sample habituation data How long infants look dishabituation no dishabituation habituation

7 Eye-tracking What the infant sees Eye close-upScene camera

8 Infant ERP

9 Theories of development Nativism vs Empiricism Piaget Pre-Piagetian knowledge.

10 Theories of development Nativism Infants are born with rich knowledge of the structure of the world Core knowledge includes knowledge about events and objects Empiricism/ (~Constructivism) Infants are born into a “blooming, buzzing confusion” Must discover the structure of the world by perceptual and motor experience

11 Piaget’s Scheme Schemas: frameworks in which to organize information Assimilation: making information fit into a pre-set schema. Accomodation: changing a schema to account for new information. Development is articulation (refinement) and differentiation (like speciation in evolution) of schemas.

12 Piaget’s stages 1.Sensorimotor: 0-2 (children experience the world through movement and senses and learn object permanence) 2.Preoperational stage: 2-7 (acquisition of motor skills) 3.Concrete operational: 7-11 (children begin to think logically about concrete events conservation!) 4.Formal operational: 11+ (development of abstract reasoning)

13 (false) Dichotomy of development Piaget Babies are dumb. They slowly learn things. Empiricism

14 Early competence (Meltzoff) Subtle measurements of infants (ref. methods from before) Nearly newborns know –How to imitate –Object permanence –Conservation of quantity, mass –Gravity and support

15 (false) Dichotomy of development Piaget Babies are dumb. They slowly learn things. Empiricism Meltzoff, Baillargeon, Spelke Babies know stuff… Important knowledge is innate Nativism

16 What are the tasks of interest? Physical knowledge –Object permanence –(Object permanence as occlusion) –Object permanence and concreteness –Containment/Covering Social knowledge –Theory of mind. What is Innate? Learned? Learnable?

17 Object permanence

18 But what do young children know? habituation test

19 More object permanence

20 Knowing about matter. solidity

21 Early knowledge of events Occlusion violation Containment violation Covering violation

22 More knowledge of events

23 Theory of Mind The “theory” that others have goals, beliefs, and desires Young children make mistakes in reasoning about others’ beliefs Piaget called this “egocentrism” (inability to take others’ perspective)

24 Sally-Ann Task Sally puts cookies in the basket. She leaves. Anne moves the cookies to the box. Sally comes back. Where will she first look for the cookies? (up until ~4 years, children say “box”)

25 Early theory of mind Onishi & Baillargeon, 2005

26 Very early theory of mind? New goal and path New pathNew goal

27 Piagetian conservation tasks

28 Object occlusion (training core knowledge)

29 Object occlusion: Data

30 You can train 4mos to perceive occlusion earlier!

31 More training of core knowledge

32 Shape bias training

33 Shape bias results

34 What are the tasks of interest? Physical knowledge –Object permanence –(Object permanence as occlusion) –Object permanence and concreteness –Containment/Covering Social knowledge –Theory of mind. What is Innate? Learned? Learnable?

35 Delay of gratification? 4 year olds get one cookie, wait 20 min with parent. If they don’t eat it, they get another at the end. How many points on the SAT (taken at age 18) did the DoG test predict?

36 Delay of gratification

37

38 Discussion: how much is too much? Should we try to “pump up” kids’ cognitive development with products like Baby Einstein?

39 In animals? A clear plastic bowl was placed within reach of the ape by putting it halfway under the bottom of the ape's cage. The bowl was situated so that the experimenter could place chocolate pieces into the bowl from the outside of the ape's cage, and so that the ape could pull the bowl into the cage at any time during the trial. The experimenter (the author) had a second bowl that contained 20 chocolate pieces. He picked up chocolate pieces from his bowl and placed them into the ape's bowl, one at a time, until either all 20 pieces had been transferred into the ape's bowl or until the ape pulled its bowl into the cage and consumed the chocolate pieces.


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