Title: The First Two Years: Cognitive Development
1The First Two Years Cognitive Development
The Developing Person Through Childhood and
Adolescence by Kathleen Stassen Berger
Seventh Edition
Chapter 6
- Slides prepared by Kate Byerwalter, Ph.D., Grand
Rapids Community College
2What is cognition?
- Cognition refers to thinking, including language,
learning, memory, and intelligence. - Jean Piaget (born 1896) was a pioneer in studying
cognitive development in humans. - More recent research has both validated and
extended Piagets ideas about infants cognitive
abilities.
3Sensorimotor Intelligence
- Piagets first stage of cognitive development,
characterized by learning through senses and
motor actions.
PHOTODISC
4Adaptation to New Ideas Includes
- Assimilation taking new information in by
incorporating it into previous schemas
(categories) - Example A red ball bounces like a blue ball.
- Accommodation requires an adjustment of previous
schemas upon new information - Example A red tomato does NOT bounce like a red
ball!
5Stages One and Two of Sensorimotor Intelligence
- Stage One the stage of reflexes
- Stage Two first acquired adaptations
- Example An infant sucks a bottle differently
than the mothers nipple. - Primary circular reactions repetitive actions
with the infants own body
6Stages Three and Four of Sensorimotor
Intelligence
- Stage Three making interesting sights last
- Example infant smiles when someone shakes a
rattle (secondary circular reaction). - Stage Four new adaptations and anticipation
- The infant shows goal-directed behavior
- Object permanence begins
7Quiz Which stage is this?
ESBIN-ANDERSON / THE IMAGE WORKS
8Stage Five of Sensorimotor Intelligence
- Stage Five new means through active
experimentation - Piaget called infants in this stage little
scientists because of their need for
experimentation. - Example An infant drops her spoon to see what
will happen.
9Stage Six of Sensorimotor Intelligence
- Stage Six new means through mental combinations
- Infants can think before taking action, for
example, wondering should I really pull that
cats tail. - Deferred imitation infants can copy the behavior
of others, even days later
10Quiz This is an example of what?
LDWA-DANN TARDIFF / CORBIS
11Piaget and Research Methods
- Advanced research tools (i.e., habituation and
fMRI), have shown that aspects of Piagets
sensorimotor intelligence actually occur earlier
for most infants than Piaget predicted. - These findings do not negate Piagets work, only
update it.
12What is habituation?
- Habituation is the process of getting used to
(i.e., bored with) a stimulus after repeated
exposure. - An infant shows it by looking away.
- If a new object appears and the infant reacts
(change in heart rate, sucking), it is assumed he
recognizes the object as something different.
13Information Processing Theory
- Information processing theory focuses on the
step-by-step description of the mechanisms of
human thought at any age. - Research on memory and affordances stem from
this theory.
14Affordances
- Affordances opportunities for perception and
interaction that environment offers - These depend on
- Past experiences
- Current developmental level
- Sensory awareness of opportunities
- Immediate needs and motivation
15Visual Cliff
- The visual cliff is an apparatus to measure depth
perception. - Infants are interested in crossing the cliff
until about 8 months, after they have had
experience falling. - The cliff affords danger for older infants.
16Visual Cliff
MARK RICHARDS / PHOTOT EDIT
17Movement and People
- Infants have dynamic perception, focused on
movement and change. - They have a people preference from the first days
of life! - Examples listen to voices, stare at faces, are
soothed by touch
18Make it Real Memory
- Whats your prediction Can infants remember
anything? For how long? What about a 1 or 2 year
old? - What is your earliest memory?
19Memory
- Even very young infants (3 months) can remember
IF - Experimental conditions are real life
- Motivation is high
- Special measures aid memory retrieval (repetition
and reminders) - Example Rovee-Colliers mobile experiment
20Mobiles and Memories
MICHAEL NEWMAN / PHOTOEDIT
21Memory (cont.)
- Deferred imitation begins by 9 months, becoming
more elaborate with age. - Example A young infant imitates hitting the dog,
a behavior modeled by an older sibling. - Implicit memory (for routines) develops sooner
than explicit memory (for facts).
22(No Transcript)
23First noises
- Infants are noisy!
- They coo, squeal, cry, yell, grunt, gurgle
- Infants prefer child-directed speech
- High-pitched, simplified, repetitive speech of
adults
24Babbling
- Babbling is repeating certain syllables (e.g.,
da-da-da). - All babies babble, even deaf babies (although
later and less frequently). - Babbling is a way to communicate.
25First Words
- First words usually appear around 1 year.
- They are often familiar nouns.
- (Have you ever heard of an infants first word
being stapler?)
26The Language Explosion
- The naming explosion refers to a language spurt
once an infant begins talking. - Infants learn about 50100 words a month.
- Culture shapes which words appear first.
27Sentences
- A holophrase is a single word that expresses an
entire thought (e.g., juice). - Two-word sentences appear around 21 months, and
remarkably, follow proper grammar. - Example more juice, not juice more
28Make it Real Language
- What fun sentences or words (good ones or
mistakes) have you heard a young child make? - Example I catched the ball.
29Theories of Language Learning
- There are 3 theories of how infants learn
language - They are taught (view of B. F. Skinner)
- They teach themselves (view of Noam Chomsky)
- Social impulses foster learning
30Theory One Infants Are Taught
- B. F. Skinner argued that infants learn language
by - Associating objects with words heard often
- Reinforcement and praise for correct words
- Correction of incorrect words
31Support for Theory One
- Careful research by Hart and Risley (1995) has
demonstrated that infants of parents who spoke
more words had superior language development.
32(No Transcript)
33Theory Two Infants Teach Themselves
- Noam Chomsky argued that language is far too
complex to be learned through step-by-step
conditioning. - Infants make up words they have never heard
before (e.g., runned). - He believed a language acquisition device (LAD)
exists only in humans.
34Theory Three Social Impulses Foster Infant
Language
- This theory argues that the social desire to
communicate drives infants to learn language. - Example Upon hearing a new word, an infant looks
to where the adult is looking before assuming an
association between the word and object.
35A Hybrid Theory
- An emergentist coalition combines aspects of
several theories. - Different theories may apply at different ages.
- Culture plays a role in language learning.
36How about a bedtime story?
37A Note for Caregivers
- Engaging a young infant in the wonder of
language, through reading, talking, singing,
etc., is giving that infant an amazing gift. He
or she will have a head start on learning
language and developing a strong vocabulary!