Title: Infancy: Cognitive Development Truth or Fiction
1Chapter 6Infancy Cognitive Development
2Infancy Cognitive Development Truth or Fiction?
- For 2-month-old infants, out of sight is out
of mind, - A 1-hour-old infant may imitate an adult who
sticks out his or her tongue.
3Infancy Cognitive Development Truth or Fiction?
- Psychologists can begin to measure intelligence
in infancy. - Infant crying is a primitive form of language.
4Infancy Cognitive Development Truth or Fiction?
- You can advance childrens development of
pronunciation by correcting their errors. - Children are prewired to listen to language in
such a way that they come to understand rules of
grammar.
5Cognitive Development
6Cognitive Development Jean Piaget
- Focus on development of childrens way of
perceiving and mentally representing the world - Schemes
- Concepts
- Assimilate
- Fit new ideas into existing schemes
- Accommodate
- Modify schemes to accept new ideas
7What is the Sensorimotor Stage of Cognitive
Development?
- Development through sensory and motor activity
- Birth through 2 years
- Progress from reflex responses to goal oriented
behavior - Form mental representations
- Hold complex pictures of past events in mind
- Solve problems by mental trial and error
8What are the Parts or Substages of the
Sensorimotor Development?
- Simple Reflexes
- Birth to 1 month
- Modify reflexes based on experience
- Primary Circular Reactions
- 1 to 4 months
- Primary focus on infants own body
- Circular repeated behaviors
- Secondary Circular Reactions
- 4 to 8 months
- Secondary focus on objects or environmental
events - Track moving objects until they disappear from
view
9What are the Parts or Substages of the
Sensorimotor Development?
- Coordination of Secondary Schemes
- 8 to 12 months
- Coordinate schemes to attain specific goals
- Begin to imitate others
- Tertiary Circular Reactions
- 12 to 18 months
- Deliberate trial and error behaviors
- Invention of New Means Through Mental
Combinations - 18 to 24 months
- External exploration is replaced by mental
exploration.
10Lessons in Observation Piagets Sensorimotor
Stage
- Describe Jean Piagets sensorimotor period of
cognitive development. How do sensory and motor
activities interact in the development of
cognitive skills, according to Piaget? - Describe the behaviors of 1-week old Aiden and
2-month-old Giuseppina. Are their behaviors
purposeful? Discuss differences in their
behaviors with regard to Piagets concept of the
circular reaction.
11Lessons in Observation Piagets Sensorimotor
Stage
- Describe the behaviors of 6-week-old Aislynne and
5-month-old James. Do their behaviors illustrate
primary or secondary circular reactions? Why?
12Lessons in Observation Piagets Sensorimotor
Stage
- Which infant presented in the video illustrates
Piagets concept of the coordination of secondary
schemes? Describe the infants behavior. How
old is the infant? - Which infant illustrates a tertiary circular
reaction? Describe the infants behavior.
Approximately how old is this infant?
13Lessons in Observation Piagets Sensorimotor
Stage
- Outline the development of object permanence by
describing the behaviors of 2-month-old
Giuseppina, 6-month-old Anthony, and 20-month-old
Tess with respect to hidden objects.What do
their behaviors indicate regarding their mental
representation abilities? Which of them has
developed object permanence?
14How Does Object Permanence Develop?
- Neonates show no response to objects not within
their immediate grasp - 2 month - show surprise when a screen is lifted
after an object was placed behind a screen and
now is not there - 6 month - try to retrieve a preferred object
partially hidden - 8 to 12 month - try to retrieve objects
completely hidden - Commit A not B error
- After 12 months no longer show A not B error
- More recent research object permanence in some
form as early as 2 1/2 - 3 1/2 months
15Figure 6.2 Object Permanence Before 4 Months of
Age?
16What are the Strengths of Piagets Theory?
- Comprehensive model
- Confirmation from research of others
- Pattern and sequence appear cross culturally
17What are the Limitations of Piagets Theory?
- Stages are more gradual than discontinuous
- Underestimate infants competence
- Emergence of object permanence
- Deferred imitation
- Computational concepts
18A Closer Look
- Counting in the Crib?
- Findings from a Mickey Mouse Experiment
19Information Processing
20What are Infants Tools for Processing
Information?
- Memory
- Neonates show memory for previously exposed
stimuli - By 12 months dramatic improvement in encoding and
retrieval - Rovee-Collier (1993) studies of infant memory
21What are Infants Tools for Processing
Information?
- Imitation
- Deferred imitation 9 months
- Neonates imitate adults who stick out their
tongue - Not present in older infants
- May indicate reflexive response
22Individual Differences in Intelligence Among
Infants
23How do we Measure Individual Differences in the
Development of Cognitive Functioning?
- Scales of infant development or intelligence
- Bayley Scales of Infant Development
- 178 mental-scale items
- 111 motor-scale items
- behavior rating scale based on examiner
observation - Screening for handicaps
- Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale
- Denver Developmental Screening Test
24How Well do Infant Scales Predict Later
Intellectual Performance?
- Overall infant scale scores do not predict school
grades or IQ of schoolchildren - Visual recognition memory ability to
discriminate previously seen objects from novel
objects - Good predictive validity for IQ and language
ability
25Language Development
26What are Prelinguistic Vocalizations?
- Prelinguistic vocalizations do not represent
objects or events - Examples of prelinguistic vocalizations
- Crying
- Cooing vowel-like, linked to pleasant feelings
- Babbling combine vowels and consonants
- Echolalia repetition of vowel/consonant
combinations - Intonation patterns of rising and falling melody
27Developing in a World of Diversity
- Babbling Here, There,
- and Everywhere
28How Does Vocabulary Develop?
- Receptive vocabulary outpaces expressive
- First word typically 11 to 13 months
- 3 or 4 months later 10 to 30 words
- First words generally nominals
- general (class nouns) and specific (proper nouns)
- 18 to 22 months rapid increase from 50 to more
than 300 words
29A Closer Look
- Teaching Sign Language to Infants
30Styles in Language Development
- Referential language style
- Use language to label objects
- Expressive language style
- Use language as means for engaging in social
interactions - Overextensions
- Extend meaning of one word to refer to things or
actions for which the word is not known
31How do Infants Create Sentences?
- Telegraphic speech
- Brief expression with the meanings of sentences
- Mean length of utterance (MLU)
- Average number of morphemes used in sentence
- Holophrases
- Single words used to express complex meanings
- Two word sentences
- 18 to 24 months telegraphic two word sentences
begin - Demonstrate syntax
32Figure 6.6 Mean Length of Utterance in Three
Children
33Developing in a World of Diversity
- Two-Word Sentences Here, There, and
34How do Learning Theorists Account for Language
Development?
- Imitation
- Children learn from parental models
- Does not explain utter phrases that have not been
observed - Reinforcement
- Sounds of adults language are reinforced
- Foreign sounds become extinct
- Use of shaping
35Developing in a World of Diversity
36Language Development
37What is the Nativist View of Language Development?
- Innate or inborn factors cause children to attend
to and acquire language in certain ways - Psycholinguistic Theory
- Interaction between environmental influences and
inborn tendency to acquire language
38Language Acquisition Device
- The inborn prewired tendency to acquire a
language - Evidence for LAD
- Universality of language abilities
- Regularity of early production of sounds, even
among deaf children - Invariant sequences of language development,
regardless of language - Chomsky children are prewired to perceive and
use a universal language
39What Parts of the Brain Are Involved in Language
Development?
- Key structures for most people are based in left
hemisphere - Brocas area
- Wernickes area
- Aphasia caused by damage in either area
- Brocas aphasia slow laborious speech with
simple sentences - Wernickes aphasia impairment comprehending
speech of others and expressing their own
thoughts - Angular gyrus
- Translates visual information into auditory
sounds - Impairment can cause reading difficulties and
dyslexia
40Figure 6.7 Brocas and Wernickes Areas of the
Cerebral Cortex
41What is Meant by a Sensitive Period in Language
Development?
- Plasticity of brain provides a sensitive period
of learning language - Begins about 18 to 24 months and continues
through puberty - Left hemisphere injuries
- Children recover good deal of speech, utilizing
right hemisphere - Case studies
- Genie
- Simon and ASL
42A Closer Look