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What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedDannemiller, James L.; Banks, Martin S. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1983
Proposes, as an alternative to Sokolovian models, a model of early habituation based on selective adaptation of feature detectors. The model suggests that early habituation is attributable to the organization and immaturity of the young infant's visual system. (RH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants, Models
Miller, Delores J.; And Others – J Exp Child Psychol, 1970
Consistent age changes suggest 2 overlapping developmental dimensions: (1) The ability to deal with visible versus invisible displacements, and (2) with nonsequential versus sequential displacements. Other findings are included. (MH)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedLegerstee, Maria – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Maintains author's interpretation of 6-month-olds' behavior is consistent with task requirements in the 2000 study and previous work showing that infants use explanatory inferences to make sense of their world. Asserts that ability to understand that people communicate with persons but act on objects is precursor to infants' understanding at 9 to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants, Inferences
Peer reviewedFein, Greta G. – Developmental Psychology, 1975
Investigates the ability of 2-year-old children to pretend that one thing is another. Results indicate that when one thing is substituted for another, pretending varies as a function of the number of substitutions. (LLK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Creative Thinking, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedWormith, S. J.; And Others – Child Development, 1975
Investigated the possibility that evidence of frequency discrimination might be found when the experimental procedures involved the conjugate reinforcement of nonnutritive sucking. (SDH)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Cognitive Development, Discrimination Learning, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedLuo, Yuyan; Baillargeon, Renee; Brueckner, Laura; Munakata, Yuko – Cognition, 2003
This study examined two alternative interpretations of violation-of-expectation findings that young infants can represent hidden objects. Findings indicated that 5-month-olds succeeded in reasoning about the interaction of a visible and a hidden object even though the 2 objects were never simultaneously visible and a 3- or 4-minute delay preceded…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants, Memory
Peer reviewedBaldwin, Dare A.; And Others – Child Development, 1993
Nine- to 16-month-old infants explored pairs of novel toys in 2 conditions: violated expectation, in which the first toy produced an interesting nonobvious property and the second toy did not; and interest control, in which neither toy produced the interesting property. Infants persistently attempted to reproduce the interesting property in the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Exploratory Behavior, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedMunakata, Yuko; Bauer, David; Stackhouse, Tracy; Landgraf, Laura; Huddleston, Jennifer – Cognition, 2002
Tested whether 7-month-olds' means-end behaviors were genuine or the repetition of trained behaviors under conditions of greater arousal. Found that infants' learned button-pushing to light a set of distant lights differed from button-pushing to retrieve toys. Infants demonstrated means-end skills with behaviors that they had not been trained to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Habituation, Infant Behavior, Infants
Schwier, Christiane; van Maanen, Catharine; Carpenter, Malinda; Tomasello, Michael – Infancy, 2006
Gergely, Bekkering, and Kiraly (2002) demonstrated that 14-month-old infants engage in "rational imitation." To investigate the development and flexibility of this skill, we tested 12-month-olds on a different but analogous task. Infants watched as an adult made a toy animal use a particular action to get to an endpoint. In 1 condition there was a…
Descriptors: Imitation, Infants, Intention, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedJones-Molfese, Victoria – Child Development, 1975
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Research Methodology, Visual Perception
Peer reviewedAnd Others; Schuberth, Richard E. – Child Development, 1978
Tested two competing hypotheses explaining infants' failure to search for an object in a new hiding place: (1) that the concept of object is not yet differentiated from the concept of place, and (2) that difficulties in spatial localization are responsible for the search failure. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Fundamental Concepts, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedLewis, Michael; Ramsay, Douglas S. – Child Development, 1997
Examined whether early differences in stress reactivity were related to self-recognition at 18 months. Found that self-recognition was related to greater cortisol response and less rapid quieting at 6 to 18 months, whereas cortisol and quieting responses of 2- to 4-month-olds did not differentiate self-recognizers and non-self-recognizers,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedMareschal, Denis; Johnson, Mark H. – Cognition, 2003
Tested 4-month-olds' memory for surface feature and location information following brief occlusions. Found that when target objects were images of female faces or monochromatic asterisks, infants increased looking times following changes in identity or color but not changes in location or combinations of feature and location. When objects were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedBoller, Kimberly; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1990
Revealed that 6-month-old infants are unable to access either an original memory or a reactivated memory after lengthy intervals. Despite the fact that their memory processing is more rapid during encoding and retrieval than that of infants half their age, their facility for accessing an original or reactivated memory is weaker than that of such…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Context Effect, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedGoubet, Nathalie; Clifton, Rachel K. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Two experiments studied infants' use of remembered knowledge of auditory-visual events to guide reaching and grasping. Results indicated that reaching was initiated and completed after sound cues ceased. Accurate searching depended on subjects' experience in light presentation. Results suggest that 6 1/2-month-olds can represent unseen objects and…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants

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