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Infancy: Cognitive Development

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Title: Infancy: Cognitive Development


1
Chapter 5
  • Infancy Cognitive Development

2
What is Cognitive Development?
  • The development of childrens ways of perceiving
    and mentally representing the world.
  • Huh?
  • Another way of saying A focus on the developing
    thought processes of infants and children

3
Question
  • Who was the first theorist to focus on a childs
    cognitive development?
  • ? Piaget!

4
Piaget
  • Studied childrens cognitive development as it
    progresses through 4 stages.
  • He believed children were naturally curious. They
    want to make sense of their experiences, and in
    the process learn how to understand the world.
  • He believed children were like scientists who
    create theories on how the world works. (and this
    makes life a little more predicable!)

5
Piagets Basic Principals
  • Childrens cognitive development progresses in an
    orderly sequence of stages (which are invariant).
  • Childrens concepts of the world are called
    Schemes.
  • Schemes are mental categories of related events,
    objects or knowledge.

6
Schemes, cont.
  • Schemes are organized ways of making sense of
    experience that change with age.
  • Schemes at first are action based, sensorimotor
    patterns repeated over and over then later move
    to thinking before acting pattern which is more
    deliberate.
  • Schemes change constantly, adapting to the
    childrens experiences.
  • Children build schemes through direct interaction
    with the environment, called Adaptation

7
How Is This Adaptation (or change) Done?
  • Children attempt to Assimilate new events or
    experiences into existing schemes.
  • When assimilation does not allow the child to
    make sense of novel events, they will Accommodate
    by modifying their existing schemes.
  • Accommodation is when schemes are modified based
    on experience.

8
Adaptation, cont.
  • When schemes are modified, the child organizes
    them.
  • This organization creates an internal
    rearrangement and linking of schemes to create an
    interconnected system.

9
Review
  • We know that Piaget identified 4 stages of
    cognitive development.
  • (remember them?)
  • In this chapter we will only focus on the first
    one, the Sensorimotor Stage.

10
Sensorimotor Stage of Development
  • From birth to 2 years
  • Involves learning through sensory and motor
    activities.
  • Infants progress from responding to events with
    reflexes, to responding with goal-directed,
    intentional behavior that involves an awareness
    of past events.

11
What Characterizes Sensorimotor Thinking?
  • 1. Adapting to, and exploring the environment
  • 2. Understanding objects
  • 3. Using symbols

12
1. Adapting to and Exploring the Environment
  • At first newborns respond reflexively to their
    environment.
  • At about 8 months there is the onset of goal
    directed behavior there is a means to an end.
    In this stage the infant gains the capacity to
    imitate/copy and action not originally in their
    repertoires.
  • At 12 months infants become active experimenters,
    Behavior takes on a new experimental quality
    Infants repeat actions over and over to see how
    they work like a little scientist.

13
Trial and Error Learning
  • The Little Scientist

14
2. Understanding Objects
  • Infants in the sensorimotor stage are beginning
    to understand objects.
  • Objects things which exist regardless of our
    actions and thoughts towards them.
  • Early on for the infant it is out of sight, out
    of mind.

15
What is Object Permanence?
  • The recognition that an object or person
    continues to exist when out of sight.
  • Emerges over the 1st yr.
  • The development of object permanence is tied to
    the infants tendency to form mental
    representations (images) of an object and reason
    about them

16
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17
3. Using Symbols
  • By 18 months infants have begun to talk and
    gesture, which is evidence of the use of symbols.
  • Symbols represent objects and the relationships
    among them.
  • Remember Words and gestures are symbols that
    stand for something else.

18
3. Using Symbols, cont.
  • Wave bye-bye same as saying bye-bye
  • Apple word represents the object
  • Once infants begin using symbols they can begin
    to anticipate the consequences of actions
    mentally instead of having to perform them.

Bye-Bye!
19
What is Information Processing?
  • A focus on how children manipulate or process
    information coming in from the environment.
  • What are the 2 tools that aid an infant in
    information processing?
  • a. Memory
  • b. Imitation

20
a. Memory
  • Memory improves dramatically between 2-6 mo, then
    again by 12 mo.
  • Memory improves as children age, which can be
    attributed to development in the parts of the
    brain responsible for memory.

21
b. Imitation
  • Neonates have been found to imitate adults who
    open their mouth or stick out their tongue.

22
Imitation is Even Evident in.
  • Infant Primates!

23
How Does Language Develop in Infants?
  • It develops according to an invariant sequence of
    stages.
  • At first infants vocalize using no words, called
    Prelinguistic Vocalizations.
  • Prelinguistic vocalizations are sounds which do
    not represent objects or events.
  • They are the steps to speech.

24
What are the Steps of Prelinguistic Vocalizations?
  • 1. Crying (Birth-1mo)
  • 2. Cooing (2mo) Use of tongue to make noises of
    pleasure or excitement. Vowel like. oooooh and
    ahhhh
  • 3. Babbling (6-9mo) First vocalizations that
    sound like human speech but have no meaning.
    dah bah mah

Not screaming, babbling!
25
Steps in Prelinguistic Vocalizations, cont.
  • 4. Echolalia (10-12mo) repetition of syllables
    over and over (babababababa, dadadadadada, pause
    then another combination. (sounds like
    conversation)
  • 5. Intonation (end of 12 mo) Using the rising and
    falling melody of adult speech. Is sounding more
    like real speech because the infant stresses some
    syllables and varies their pitch.

26
What is Vocabulary Development?
  • It refers to the childs learning the meanings
    of words.
  • Generally speaking, childrens receptive
    vocabulary develops faster than their expressive
    vocabulary. (this means that at any given time,
    they can understand more words than they can use)

27
What is Vocabulary Development?, cont.
  • Receptive vocabulary The ability to understand
    language. To make the link between speech sounds
    and particular objects.
  • Expressive vocabulary Ability to speak language.

28
A Childs First Words
  • Typically spoken between 11-13 mo (range is from
    8mo-18mo) tend to be 1-2 syllables (mama, dada),
    animals, food, toys, and objects that move.
  • 3-4 mo after 1st words, they develop 10-30 words.
  • By 18mo, produce up to 50 words

29
A Childs First Words, cont.
  • At 18-22 mo there is a rapid burst in vocabulary.
    Increase from 50 to 300 words in a few months,
    mostly just nouns (called a naming explosion)
  • This language growth continues until preschool.
    Children gain an average of 9 new words a day!
  • By 2 ½ children have 275-650 words.

30
Know
  • The first words that children produce tend to be
    words their parents use frequently when they talk
    to them. This means..
  • ? talk to you children!

31
Two Styles of Language Development
  • 1. Referential Language Style Use of language to
    label objects in the environment.
  • 2. Expressive Language Style Use of language
    primarily as a means for engaging in social
    interactions. (this is more common)

32
Question
  • What can a parent do (besides talking and reading
    to their child) to encourage their language
    development?

33
Need a Clue?
  • ? Watch Sesame Street!
  • Sesame Street, probably the most studied
    television program of all time, has been shown to
    have a variety of benefits for preschool
    children, including increases in vocabulary,
    ability to count, and general school readiness.
    Garrison, M., Christakis, D. (2005).
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