D4 Infancia
D4 Infancia
D4 Infancia
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of the losses they have in healthy development, such as the loss of primitive reexes over
the rst year of life, and the loss of the ability to perceive some sensory distinctions (such
as sounds that are not used in their native language) over the rst year of life.
Our second theme, the interaction of nature and nurture in development, borrows
the example of the interpretive skills of perception mentioned above. Sensory and perceptual development clearly require both nature and nurture to proceed. The infants
brain and sensory receptors mature over the rst year and this maturation limits and
guides the development of what the infant is able to sense and perceive. But the infants
abilities are also guided by the sensory experiences she has and how her experiences and
motor developments shape her perceptions of what she senses.
By denition, the various forms of learning the infant experiences early in life (habituation, classical conditioning, operant conditioning, and observational learning) all
require experience (or nurture) to develop. And yet we also saw many examples of how
infants developing cognitive abilitiesto retain and retrieve from memory the things
they observed and learnedprovided examples of how their biological development (or
nature) set limits on their developing learning abilities.
Learning also provided examples of qualitative and quantitative changes in development across infancy. Some of the changes in the ability to learn through observation and
conditioning improved quantitatively; the infant gradually became better able to retain,
recall, and use what he or she had learned over longer delays. Some of the changes in
learning, such as newborn imitation, changed qualitatively: Infants were able to express
this ability very early in life, but then passed through a developmental stage at a few
months of age when they were not able to imitate, and nally reached another stage
of development when imitation seemed to take a different form and they again could
imitate facial expressions. Another basic example of qualitative change in infancy is the
change from expressing newborn reexes to the loss of these reexes across the rst year
of life.
Finally, although we have focused heavily on perceptual growth in this chapter, we
should remember that development is a holistic enterprise and that a childs maturing
perceptual abilities inuence all aspects of development. Take intellectual development,
for example. As we will see in Chapter 7, Jean Piaget argued that all the intellectual advances of the rst 2 years spring from the infants sensory and motor activities. How
else, he asked, could infants ever come to understand the properties of objects without
being able to see, hear, or smell them, to fondle them, or to hold them in their mouths?
How could infants ever use language without rst perceiving meaningful regularities in
the speech they hear? So Piaget (and many others) claim that perception is central to
everythingthere is nothing we do (consciously, at least) that is not inuenced by our
interpretation of the world around us.
SUMMARY
Intermodal Perception
Signs that senses are integrated at birth include:
looking in the direction of sound-producing sources;
reaching for objects they can see; and
expecting to see the source of sounds or to feel objects for which they are reaching.
Intermodal perception
Intermodal perception is the ability to recognize by
one sensory modality an object or experience that is already familiar through another modality.
It becomes possible once the infant can process
through two different senses.
Cultural Inuences on Infant Perception
Inuences may involve losing the ability to detect sensory input that has little sociocultural signicance.
Basic Learning Processes in Infancy
Learning
a relatively permanent change in behavior
results from experience (repetition, practice, study, or
observations) rather than from heredity, maturation, or
physiological change resulting from injury
Habituation
a process in which infants come to recognize and
thus cease responding to stimuli that are presented
repeatedly
the simplest form of learning
may be possible even before birth
improves dramatically over the rst few months of life
Classical conditioning
A neutral conditioned stimulus (CS) is repeatedly
paired with an unconditioned stimulus (UCS) and,
eventually, the CS alone comes to elicit a response called
a conditioned response (CR).
Newborns can be classically conditioned if the responses have survival value, but are less susceptible to
this kind of learning than older infants.
Operant conditioning
The subject rst emits a response and then associates
this action with a particular outcome.
Observational learning
This occurs as the observer attends to a model and
constructs symbolic representations of its behavior.
These symbolic codes are stored in memory and may
be retrieved at a later date to guide the childs attempts
to imitate the behavior he or she has witnessed.
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