Memory Development - Florida Atlantic University

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Transcript Memory Development - Florida Atlantic University

Main criticisms (and alternatives) to Piaget’s Theory
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On Stages of Cognitive Development
- The timing of the stage progression is more variable than Piaget proposed.
- Piaget believed he was describing children’s cognitive competence (the
limits of their abilities), whereas he was actually describing their performance
(what a child usually does under certain circumstances)
- Piaget underestimated the abilities of sensorimotor children, including
object permanence, deferred imitation, and their and problem-solving skills.
- Preoperational children are not as egocentric as Piaget proposed, with
magical thinking being restricted to unfamiliar contexts.
- Preoperational children can learn some concrete operational concepts (for
example, conservation), and concrete operations children can be taught some
formal operational contents.
- Adults frequently fail to use formal operations in daily life. Not all adults in
all cultures exhibit formal operations. Formal operations can be also domainspecific (that is, they can be successfully applied to a certain contents, but not
to others).
Main criticisms (and alternatives) to Piaget’s Theory
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On Mechanisms of Cognitive Development
- “stage” is not a worthy concept; many scientists think there is no real proof
they actually exist, at least as described by in Piaget (Information-processing
approaches)
- “stage” can be a useful concept if used more liberally than Piaget did (NeoPiagetian Theories)
- social environment and culture play a more significant and crucial role than
Piaget proposed (Sociocultural Approach)
- evolved dispositions play a more significant role in early development than
Piaget proposed (Theory Theories, and Core Knowledge Approaches)
Memory Development
Memory Development in Infancy
• Novelty preference
• Conjugate reinforcement procedure
• Deferred imitation
Apparatus used by Rovee-Collier et al.
Conjugate Reinforcement Procedures
• Baseline kicking rate (3 minutes, unattached to apparatus
• Reinforcement period (9 minutes, ribbon attached to
apparatus)
• Delay
• Test period (unattached to apparatus)
Maximum duration of retention from 2 to 18 months (from
Rovee-Collier, 1999)
Deferred-Imitation Procedure
• Demonstration of novel actions on objects
– Touching box with head to turn on light (Meltzoff)
– Placing bar across two posts, hang plate from bar, strike bar with
mallet (Bauer et al.)
• Delay
• Test
The “gong” task. Infants watched as a model performed a three-step sequence:
placing the bar across two posts, hanging a plate on the bar, and striking the plate
with a mallet. Infants were later given the opportunity to reproduce the sequence,
demonstrating evidence of deferred imitation, and thus memory
Percentage of 13-, 16-, and 20-month-old infants displaying deferred
imitation of three-step sequences as a function of length of delay
(from Bauer et al., 2000)
Is deferred imitation a form of explicit memory?
• McDonough et al. (1995) tested patients with amnesia on
deferred-imitation task
• Baseline
• Demonstration
• Delayed test
• Various control groups
Mean number of actions correct (Max = 12) by group (from
McDonough et al., 1995)
The Development of Event Memory
Infantile Amnesia
• Freud’s repression hypothesis
Are infant memories repressed?
Infantile Amnesia
• Storage failure
• Encoding differences
– Later memory related to abilities at time of event, not time of testing
(Simcock & Hayne, 2002)
• “Children’s verbal reports were frozen in time, reflecting their verbal skills
at the time of encoding, rather than at the time of test”
• Sense of self
• Use of language in social interactions
Infantile Amnesia and Hypnotic Age Regression
• Adults asked to perform conservation tasks (Nash, 1987)
• Group 1: Age-regressed to 4-years of age
• Group 2: Pretend you’re a 4-year old
• Neither perform like real 4-year olds
• Regressed adults perform like adults who are pretending to be
4-years old
The Role of Parents in “Teaching” Children to
Remember
Children as Eyewitnesses
Three major interacting classes of variable in interpreting children’s
eyewitness memory and suggestibility (from Lindberg, 1991)
Age Differences in Eyewitness Memory
• For open-ended, free-recall questions, young children recall less than
older children, but what they recall is usually central to the event and
accurate
• Correct and incorrect recall increases in cued-recall questions, reducing
accuracy
• Amount and accuracy of memory related to:
– Length of delay
– IQ
– Level of stress
– Interviewer characteristics
– Knowledge
Age Differences in Suggestibility
• Responses to leading questions
• False-memory creation
Percentage correct and incorrect responses by age to
misleading questions (from Cassel & Bjorklund, 1995)
Percentage correct and incorrect responses by age to positiveleading questions (from Cassel & Bjorklund, 1995)
Percentage of false reports over sessions for 3/4-year olds and
5/6-year olds (from Ceci et al., 1994)
Factors influencing false-memory creation
• Plausibility (Pezdek & Hodge, 1999)
Believing rumors: Magic Mumfrey and his disappearing
bunny(Principle et al., 2010)
• 3-4 year olds + 5-6-year olds
• Watch a magic show, in which Magic Mumfrey fails to pull a rabbit out of
his hat.
• Some children overhear one teacher telling another “The rabbit got loose
and was in the classroom.” Others heard rumor only from classmates.
• Interviewed 1 week later. Some warned about false rumor, others not:
– Overheard (from teacher)/not warned
– Overheard (from teacher)/warned
– Classmate/not warned
– Classmate/warned
– Control children
Proportions of Children Who Reported Actually Seeing the Target
Activity with Their Own Eyes (Principle et al., 2010)
Sequence of phases recommended by the NICHD guidelines
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Introduction of parties and their roles
The “truth and lie ceremony” (warning the child of the necessity to tell the
truth)
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Rapport building
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Description of a recent salient event
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First narrative account of the allegation
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Narrative accounts of the last incident (if the child reports multiple
incidents)
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Cue question (for example, “You said something about a barn. Tell me about
that.”)
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Paired direct-open questions about the last incident
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Narrative account of first incident
10. Cue questions
11. Paired direct-open questions about the first incident
12. Narrative accounts of another incident that the child remembers
13. Cue questions
14. Paired direct-open questions about this incident
15. If necessary, leading questions about forensically important details not
mentioned by the child
16. Invitation for any other information the child wants to mention
Prospective Memory (Mental time travel)
• Remembering to do something in the future
• Somerville and her colleagues (1983): “Naturalistic” study
– Parents remind 2-, 3-, and 4-year-olds to remind them to perform
some task in the future
– Low interest (“Remind me to buy milk when we go to the store
tomorrow”)
– High interest (“Remind me to buy candy when we go to the store
tomorrow”)
– Short delays (5 minutes or less)
– Long delays (later in the day; tomorrow)
Proportion of children who reminded their parents to perform
some task for 2, 3-, and 4-year-old children for high- and lowinterest tasks over short and long delays
CyberCruiser (Kerns, 2000)
• 7- to 12-year-old children played a computer game called
CyberCruiser in which they used a joystick to maneuver
around obstacles.
• Children also had to occasionally check the fuel gauge to make
sure they did not run out of gas and to fill up when they had
less than a quarter tank.
Average number of times children ran out of gas
playing CyberCruiser by age (Kerns, 2000).
What is Language?
• Human language is:
• Symbolic: The sounds of spoken language or the hand
movements of sign language represent something
independent of the actual sounds or movements
• Grammatical: Language has a system of rules that permits a
speaker to produce and understand sentences that have
never been uttered before.
– Morphology
– Syntax
• Although all biologically-typical people acquire language, the
particular language children learn to speak varies with
culture.
Seven functions of language according to M. A. K.
Halliday (1973)
• Instrumental: Using language to express needs (for example, “More
milk”)
• Regulatory: Using language to tell others what to do (for example,
“Get me juice”)
• Interactional: Using language to make contact with others and form
relationships (for example, “I love you, mommy”)
• Personal: Using language to express feelings, opinions, and
individual identity (for example, I’m a good boy”)
• Heuristic: Using language to gain knowledge about the
environment (for example, “What’s that?”)
• Imaginative: Using language to tell stories and jokes, and to create
an imaginary environment.
• Representational: Using language to convey facts and information.
Describing Children’s Language Development
• Receptive language > productive language
• Early language is telegraphic
• Phonological development
– Babbling
• Morphological development
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Morpheme
Free morphemes vs. bound morphemes
Mean length of utterance (MLU)
Overregularization
Wug test
Two examples from the “wug” test (Berko, 1958).
Major milestones in early language development. “Lexicon” refers to the
words that a child knows (semantics), and “communication” refers to a child’s
ability to use language in social situations (pragmatics).
Syntactic Development
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Negatives
Questions
Passives
Relating events in sentences
Semantic Development
• Word spurt productive vocabulary
– Productive vocabulary: 22-37 mos.
– Receptive vocabulary: 12-17 mos.
Different children show different times of onset of their growth
spurt
Semantic Development
• Constraints on word learning
– Whole-object assmuption
– Taxonomic assumption
– Mutual exclusivity assumption
• Overextentions
• Underextensions
Nativist Perspective on Language Development
• Noam Chomsky
– Surface vs. deep structure
– Generative grammar
– Language acquisition device (LAD)
– Universal Grammar
Eric Lenneberg
• Language is
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Species specific
Species uniform
Difficult to retard
Develops in a regular sequence
Has specific anatomical structures
Associated with genetically-related disabilities
Universal Grammar
• All languages have:
• Extensive vocabularies divided into different parts-of-speech
categories
• Words organized into phrases following similar rule structure
(X-bar system)
• All permit movement of grammatical categories
• All use suffixes and prefixes
Pidgins and Creoles
• Pidgins: not a true language
• Creoles: a true language created by children of pidgin
speakers, often in one generation
• Senghas & Coppola
– Development of Nicaraguan Sign Language
This figure shows two views of the left hemisphere. Figure A shows possible
networks for various language functions. Figure B shows the grammar center
and other areas involved in language, as proposed by Sakai (2005). The green
area is selectively involved in comprehending sentences. The red areas are
specifically involved in syntactic processing and can be regarded as the
grammar center (from Sakai, 2005, p. 817).
Is there a critical period for learning language?
• Social deprivation (feral children)
• First-language learning of deaf people
– Newport: Proficiency in ASL as function of age of exposure
• Recovery of function after brain damage
• Second-language learning
– Johnson & Newport: proficiency in English as function of
age of arrival in U.S.
The relationship between age at arrival in the United States and
total number of correct answers on a test of English grammar
(data from Johnson & Newport, 1989
Bilingual speakers made grammatical judgments in their second language. For adults who were
highly proficient in both languages (A), different parts of the brain were involved in making
grammatical judgments for those who learned their second language late (LAHP) versus those
who learned their second language early (EAHP). When considering people only who learned
their second language late, different areas of the brain were involved for people with high- versus
low-language proficiency in their second language (B) (from Wartenburger et al., 2003).
“Less is More” Hypothesis
• Limitations in infancy may be adaptive to later learning
(Turkewitz & Kenny)
• Newport
• Elman (“The importance of starting small”)
Social-Interactionist Perspectives of Language
Development
• Social-pragmatic view: “Children’s initial skills of linguistic
communication are a natural outgrowth of their emerging
understanding of other persons as intentioal agents”
(Carpenter et al., 1998)
From gestures to speech
• Gestures (pointing) as form of shared attention
• The more children used gestures at 14 months of age, the larger their
vocabularies were 54 months. (Rowe & Goldin-Meadow, 2009).
• Gesture-facilitation hypothesis, arguing that the use of gestures facilitates
the acquisition of spoken language.
• The relation between gestures and language development was
investigated in a longitudinal study that followed children between 10and 14-months of age (Iverson & Goldin-Meadow, 2005). Looked at
items(gestures or speech) that were:
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initially (a) identified in speech and stayed in speech;
(b) identified in gesture and stayed in gesture;
(c) identified in speech and transferred to gesture; and
(d) identified in gesture and transferred to speech
Proportion of objects children learned to identify by speech or gesture that either
remained within the original modality (speech to speech or gesture to gesture) or
transferred to the other modality (speech to gesture of gesture to speech).
Children were much more likely to acquire a new gestures and transfer it to speech
than vice versa, supporting the gesture-facilitation hypothesis (from Iverson, & GoldinMeadow, 2005).
Child-Directed Speech
• AKA: infant-directed speech (IDS); motherese; parentese
• Language acquisition support system (LASS, Bruner)
• Prosodic features of IDS
– Higher acoustic frequency
– Wider range of frequencies
– Greater incidence of rising countours
• Short, grammatical sentences
Child-Directed Speech
• Used across cultures (in varying degrees)
• Infants more attentive to adults using IDS as opposed to adult-directed (AD) speech (Cooper & Aslin, 1990; 1994)
• Mothers of deaf children use exaggerated signs to their infants ad infants
are more attentive to I-D signs than A-D signs (Masataka, 1998)
• Infants can discriminate sounds better in I-D than A-D speech (Trehub et
al., 1993)
• I-D speech used to regulate infant’s behavior and emotions (Fernald, 1992)
Bilingualism
• simultaneous bilingualism: children are exposed from birth to two
languages.
• sequential bilingualism: children learn a second language after mastering
their first.
• Simultaneous bilingual children often have smaller vocabularies in both
languages and a slight delay in syntactic development, but by the age of 8
or so, there are typically no differences between them and monolingual
children.
• Bilinguals:
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Better able to recognize a wider of phonemes than monolinguals
greater sensitivity toward the cultural values
display higher levels of metalinguistic awareness than monolingual children
advantage is in terms of executive function, particularly on tasks that demand flexible
thinking (also in infancy: Kovács & Mehler, 2009)
– Display better theory-of-mind than monolinguals
Language and Thought
• Piaget: Egocentric speech symptomatic of preoperational
thought
– Egocentric speech is failed attempt to communicate
• Vygotsky: private speech as cognitive self-guidance system
that eventually leads to inner speech