Quinn, P. C., Slater, A. M., Brown., E., - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Quinn, P. C., Slater, A. M., Brown., E.,

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Quinn, P. C., Slater, A. M., Brown., E., & Hayes, R. A. (2001). Developmental change in form categorization in early infancy. British Journal of Developmental ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quinn, P. C., Slater, A. M., Brown., E.,


1
Quinn, P. C., Slater, A. M., Brown., E.,
Hayes, R. A. (2001). Developmental change in form
categorization in early infancy. British Journal
of Developmental Psychology, 19, 207218.
  • Findings
  • Newborns displayed the ability to discriminate
    between exemplars across geometric categories
    (e.g. circle vs. square, Expt 1), within same
    form classes (e.g. one circle vs. another, Expt
    2).
  • In Expt 3, older infants provided evidence of
    having formed individuated categorical
    representations for circles, crosses, squares and
    triangles, whereas newborn infants did not.
  • However, newborn performance was consistent with
    the formation of broader categorical
    representations for open versus closed classes of
    form (i.e. crosses vs. circles, squares and
    triangles).
  • Theory
  • Infants have form categorization capacity
  • 3- to 4-month-old infants extract better defined
    category representations than newborns
  • Methods
  • 8 -18 newborn and older (3-4 mo.) infants
  • First established whether newborns could
    discriminate between instances from different
    form categories in Expt 1
  • Whether they could discriminate between
    instances from within a form category in Expt 2.
  • Experiment 3 followed the examination of between
    and within-category discrimination in newborns

Illustration
  • Strengths
  • Comprehensive methodology Developmental contrast
    between newborn and older infants
  • Discrimination between perceptual discrimination
    and categorization
  • Weaknesses
  • Categorical representation influenced by
    exemplars presented earlier
  • Categories are not distinct enough in
    determining whether newborns have formed
    categorical representations of familiar forms
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