Sensoritmotor intelligence
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Transcript Sensoritmotor intelligence
Chapter Six
The First Two Years:
Cognitive Development
PowerPoints prepared by Cathie Robertson, Grossmont College
Sensorimotor Intelligence
• Sensoritmotor intelligence—active
intelligence causing babies to think
while using senses and motor skills
Stages 1 and 2: Primary
Circular Reactions
• The feedback loop involving the
infants own body; infant senses
motion and tries to make sense of it
• Stage 1 = Reflexes
• Stage 2 = First Acquired Adaptations
- adaptations of reflexes, i.e., sucking—
new information taken in by senses and
responded to
Stages 1 and 2: Primary Circular
Reactions, cont.
• Assimilation and Accommodation
– assimilation—taking in new information by
incorporating it into previous knowledge
– accommodation— intake of new data to readjust, refine, expand prior schema or
actions
– babies eagerly adapt their reflexes
and senses to whatever experiences they
have
Stages 1 and 2: Primary Circular
Reactions, cont.
• Sucking as a Stage-Two Adaptation
– begin adapting at about one month
– reflexive assimilation
Stages 3 and 4: Secondary
Circular Reactions
• feedback loop involving people and
objects
• Stage 3 = Making Interesting Events Last
- repetition
- awareness
• Stage 4 = New Adaptation and
Anticipation
- goal-directed behavior
- object permanence
Stages 5 and 6: Tertiary
Circular Reactions
• Feedback loop that involves active
experimentation and exploration
- involves creativity, action, and ideas
• Stage 5 = New Means Through Active
Experimentation
– little scientist
Stages 5 and 6: Tertiary Circular
Reactions, cont.
• Stage 6 = New Means Through Mental
Combinations
– mental combinations—sequence of mental
actions tried out before actual
performance
– deferred imitation—perception of
something someone else does (modeling),
then performing action at a later time
Piaget and Modern Research
• Habituation—process of getting used to
an object or event through repeated
exposure to it
• fMRI—functional magnetic resonance
imaging measuring technique for brain
activity and neurological responses
• First three years are prime time for
cognitive development
Information Processing
• Information-processing theory—
perspective that compares human
thinking processes to computer analysis
of data, including sensory input, stored
memories, and output
Affordances
• Affordances—opportunities for
perception and interaction offered by
environment
• How something is perceived and acted
upon depends on
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past experiences
current developmental level
sensory awareness of opportunities
immediate needs and motivation
Sudden Drops
• Visual cliff measures depth perception,
which is based not on maturity level but
affordance
- depends on prior experience
• Object Constancy
- things remain what they are, despite
changes in perception or appearance
- boundaries of three-dimensional objects
Movement and People
• Dynamic perception—1 of the 2
principles explaining infant perception;
namely, that from birth perception is
primed to focus on movement and
change
• 2nd principle explaining infant
perception is that babies are fascinated
by people
• Infants most interested in emotional
affordances of their caregivers
Memory
• Certain amount of experience and
maturation in order to process and
remember experiences
• In first year infants have great
difficulty storing new memories
• Older children often unable to describe
events that occurred when they were
younger
Memory, cont.
• Very early memories possible if
– situation similar to real life
– motivation high
– special measures aid retrieval by acting as
reminders
Reminders and Repetition
• Reminder session—any perceptual
experience that helps a person recall an
idea or experience
A Little Older, A Little
More Memory
• After 6 months infants capable of
retaining information for longer periods
of time with less reminding
• Deferred imitation apparent after end
of first year
• By middle of the 2nd year, children
capable of remembering and reenacting
complex sequences
A Little Older, A Little More
Memory, cont.
• Memory is not just single entity; distinct
brain regions for particular aspects of
memory; humans have a memory for
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words
images
actions
smells
experiences
“memorized” facts
Language: What Develops in
Two Years?
• Most impressive intellectual
achievement of young child and also
of all humans
The Universal Sequence of
Language Development
• Children around the world have the
same sequence of early language
development but
– timing and depth of linguistic ability
vary
First Noises and Gestures
• Baby talk—high-pitched, simplified, and
repetitive ways adults talk to babies
• Vocalization
– crying
– cooing
• Babbling
– deaf babies do it later and less frequently,
but are more advanced in
use of gestures
First Words
• First word and sentences at age of
1 year
The Language Explosion and
Early Grammar
• Naming explosion—sudden increase in
infant vocabulary, especially nouns,
beginning at 18 months
• Holophrase—single word that expresses
a complete, meaningful thought
• Grammar—all the methods that
languages use to communicate meaning
Theories of Language Learning
• Even the very young use language well
• Three schools of thought
– infants are taught language
– infants teach themselves
– social impulses foster infant language
Theory 1: Infants are Taught
• Skinner’s reinforcement theory: quantity
and quality of talking to child affects
rate of language development (learned)
– parents are good instructors
– baby talk characterized by
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high pitch
simpler vocabulary
shorter sentence length
more questions and commands
repetition
Theory 2: Infants Teach
Themselves
• Chomsky and LAD (Language
Acquisition Device)—hypothesized
neurological (inborn) structure that
prewires all children for language,
including basic aspects of intonation,
grammar, and vocabulary
– infants innately ready to use their minds
to understand and speak whatever
language offered to them
– they are experience expectant
Theory Three: Social
Impulses Foster Language
• Social-pragmatic—social reason for
language: to communicate
• Infants seek to respond, which shows
their being social in nature— and thus
mutually dependent—by
- vocalizing
- babbling
- gesturing
- listening
- pointing
A Hybrid Theory
• Emergentist coalition—combination of
valid aspects of several theories
- cortex contains many language centers
- nature provides several paths to learning
language