Learning and the Infant Mind

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When asking how cognition comes to take its mature form, learning seems to be an obvious factor to consider. However, until quite recently, there has been very little contact between investigations of how infants learn and what infants know. For example, on the one hand, research efforts focused on infants' foundational conceptual knowledge-what they know about the physical permanence of objects, causal relations, and human intentions-often do not consider how learning may contribute to the structure of this knowledge. On the other hand, research efforts focused on infants' perceptual and motor learning-how they extract information from the environment, tune their behavior patterns according to this information, and generalize learning to new situations-often do not consider the potential impacts of these perceptual and learning mechanisms the structure of conceptual knowledge. Although each of these research efforts has made significant progress, this research has done little to narrow the divide between the disparate traditions of learning and knowledge. The chapters in this book document, for the first time, the insights that emerge when researchers who come from diverse domains and use different approaches make a genuine attempt to bridge this divide. The authors consider both infants' knowledge across domains, including knowledge of objects, physical relations between objects, categories, people, and language, and learning broadly construed, bringing to bear direct laboratory manipulations of learning and more general considerations of the relations between experience and knowledge.These authors have begun to consider whether and how the products of learning "go beyond" the input in several senses. As a result, several converging trends emerge across Whese diverse points of view. These authors have begun to investigate whether infants derive relatively abstract representations from experience, as well as the extent to which infants generalize information learned in one context to a new context. They have also begun to investigate the extent to which learning is generative, constraining and informing subsequent learning.

Author(s): Amanda Woodward, Amy Needham
Edition: 1
Year: 2008

Language: English
Pages: 352

Contents......Page 10
Contributors......Page 12
Introduction......Page 14
1. Learning and Memory: Like a Horse and Carriage......Page 32
2. What Can Statistical Learning Tell Us About Infant Learning?......Page 58
3. Developmental Origins of Object Perception......Page 76
4. An Account of Infants’ Physical Reasoning......Page 95
5. Experience Primes Infants to Individuate Objects: Illuminating Learning Mechanisms......Page 146
6. How Infants Learn Categories......Page 173
7. Multiple Learning Mechanisms in the Development of Action......Page 201
8. Learning in Infants’ Object Perception, Object-Directed Action, and Tool Use......Page 237
9. Infants’ Learning About Intentional Action......Page 256
10. Early Word Learning and Other Seemingly Symbolic Behaviors......Page 278
11. Symbol-Based Learning in Infancy......Page 292
12. The Role of Learning in Cognitive Development: Challenges and Prospects......Page 315
B......Page 326
C......Page 327
D......Page 328
G......Page 329
J......Page 330
L......Page 331
M......Page 332
P......Page 333
S......Page 334
T......Page 335
W......Page 336
Z......Page 337
A......Page 338
C......Page 339
D......Page 340
H......Page 341
L......Page 342
O......Page 345
P......Page 346
R......Page 347
T......Page 348
W......Page 349