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1.
Dev Sci ; 25(2): e13174, 2022 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34453470

RESUMEN

The ability to monitor and adjust our performance is crucial for adaptive behaviour, a key component of human cognitive control. One widely studied metric of this behaviour is post-error slowing (PES), the finding that humans tend to slow down their performance after making an error. This study is a first attempt at generalizing the effect of PES to an online adaptive learning environment where children practise mathematics and language skills. This population was of particular interest since the major development of error processing occurs during childhood. Eight million response patterns were collected from 150,000 users aged 5 to 13 years old for 6 months, across 23 different learning activities. PES could be observed in most learning activities and greater PES was associated with greater post-error accuracy. PES also varied as a function of several variables. At the task level, PES was greater when there was less time pressure, when errors were slower, and in learning activities focusing on mathematical rather than language skills. At the individual level, students who chose the most difficult level to practise and had higher skill ability also showed greater PES. Finally, non-linear developmental differences in error processing were found, where the PES magnitude increased from 6 to 9-years-old and decreased from 9 to 13. This study shows that PES underlies adaptive behaviour in an educational context for primary school students.


Asunto(s)
Educación a Distancia , Lenguaje , Adolescente , Niño , Preescolar , Humanos , Matemática , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología
2.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 210: 105196, 2021 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34090237

RESUMEN

The onset of reading ability is rife with individual differences, with some children termed "early readers" and some falling behind from the very beginning. Reading skill in children has been linked to an ability to remember nonverbal rhythms, specifically in the auditory modality. It has been hypothesized that the link between rhythm skills and reading reflects a shared reliance on the ability to extract temporal structure from sound. Here we tested this hypothesis by investigating whether the link between rhythm memory and reading depends on the modality in which rhythms are presented. We tested 75 primary school-aged children aged 7-11 years on a within-participants battery of reading and rhythm tasks. Participants received a reading efficiency task followed by three rhythm tasks (auditory, visual, and audiovisual). Results showed that children who performed poorly on the reading task also performed poorly on the tasks that required them to remember and repeat back nonverbal rhythms. In addition, these children showed a rhythmic deficit not just in the auditory domain but also in the visual domain. However, auditory rhythm memory explained additional variance in reading ability even after controlling for visual memory. These results suggest that reading ability and rhythm memory rely both on shared modality-general cognitive processes and on the ability to perceive the temporal structure of sound.


Asunto(s)
Nombres , Lectura , Percepción Auditiva , Niño , Humanos , Individualidad , Memoria , Percepción
3.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 191: 104730, 2020 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31765997

RESUMEN

Online learning environments are well-suited for tailoring the learning experience of children individually and on a large scale. An environment such as Math Garden allows children to practice exercises adapted to their specific mathematical ability; this is thought to maximize their mathematical skills. In the current experiment, we investigated whether learning environments should also consider the differential impact of cognitive load on children's math performance depending on their individual verbal working memory (WM) and inhibitory control (IC) capacity. A total of 39 children (8-11 years old) performed a multiple-choice computerized arithmetic game. Participants were randomly assigned to two conditions where the visibility of time pressure, a key feature in most gamified learning environments, was manipulated. Results showed that verbal WM was positively associated with arithmetic performance in general but that higher IC predicted better performance only when the time pressure was not visible. This effect was mostly driven by the younger children. Exploratory analyses of eye-tracking data (N = 36) showed that when time pressure was visible, children attended more often to the question (e.g., 6 × 8). In addition, when time pressure was visible, children with lower IC, in particular younger children, attended more often to answer options representing operant confusion (e.g., 9 × 4 = 13) and visited more answer options before responding. These findings suggest that tailoring the visibility of time pressure, based on a child's individual cognitive profile, could improve arithmetic performance and may in turn improve learning in online learning environments.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Educación a Distancia , Función Ejecutiva/fisiología , Inhibición Psicológica , Matemática/educación , Memoria a Corto Plazo/fisiología , Solución de Problemas/fisiología , Niño , Tecnología de Seguimiento Ocular , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino
4.
Dev Sci ; 22(1): e12726, 2019 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30184309

RESUMEN

Multisensory tools are commonly employed within educational settings (e.g. Carter & Stephenson, ), and there is a growing body of literature advocating the benefits of presenting children with multisensory information over unisensory cues for learning (Baker & Jordan, ; Jordan & Baker, ). This is even the case when the informative cues are only arbitrarily related (Broadbent, White, Mareschal, & Kirkham, ). However, the delayed retention of learning following exposure to multisensory compared to unisensory cues has not been evaluated, and has important implications for the utility of multisensory educational tools. This study examined the retention of incidental categorical learning in 5-, 7- and 9-year-olds (N = 181) using either unisensory or multisensory cues. Results found significantly greater retention of learning following multisensory cue exposure than with unisensory information when category knowledge was tested following a 24-hour period of delay. No age-related changes were found, suggesting that multisensory information can facilitate the retention of learning across this age range.


Asunto(s)
Señales (Psicología) , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Retención en Psicología , Percepción Auditiva , Niño , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Estimulación Luminosa , Percepción Visual
5.
Annu Rev Psychol ; 69: 181-203, 2018 01 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28793812

RESUMEN

Perception involves making sense of a dynamic, multimodal environment. In the absence of mechanisms capable of exploiting the statistical patterns in the natural world, infants would face an insurmountable computational problem. Infant statistical learning mechanisms facilitate the detection of structure. These abilities allow the infant to compute across elements in their environmental input, extracting patterns for further processing and subsequent learning. In this selective review, we summarize findings that show that statistical learning is both a broad and flexible mechanism (supporting learning from different modalities across many different content areas) and input specific (shifting computations depending on the type of input and goal of learning). We suggest that statistical learning not only provides a framework for studying language development and object knowledge in constrained laboratory settings, but also allows researchers to tackle real-world problems, such as multilingualism, the role of ever-changing learning environments, and differential developmental trajectories.


Asunto(s)
Desarrollo Infantil/fisiología , Desarrollo del Lenguaje , Aprendizaje por Probabilidad , Humanos , Lactante , Lenguaje , Percepción del Habla/fisiología
6.
Infancy ; 24(5): 752-767, 2019 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32677277

RESUMEN

The development of spatial visual attention has been extensively studied in infants, but far less is known about the emergence of object-based visual attention. We tested 3-5- and 9-12-month-old infants on a task that allowed us to measure infants' attention orienting bias toward whole objects when they competed with color, motion, and orientation feature information. Infants' attention orienting to whole objects was affected by the dimension of the competing visual feature. Whether attention was biased toward the whole object or its salient competing feature (e.g., "ball" or "red") changed with age for the color feature, with infants biased toward whole objects with age. Moreover, family socioeconomic status predicted feature-based attention in the youngest infants and object-based attention in the older infants when color feature information competed with whole-object information.

7.
Dev Sci ; 21(2)2018 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28447388

RESUMEN

Multisensory information has been shown to modulate attention in infants and facilitate learning in adults, by enhancing the amodal properties of a stimulus. However, it remains unclear whether this translates to learning in a multisensory environment across middle childhood, and particularly in the case of incidental learning. One hundred and eighty-one children aged between 6 and 10 years participated in this study using a novel Multisensory Attention Learning Task (MALT). Participants were asked to respond to the presence of a target stimulus whilst ignoring distractors. Correct target selection resulted in the movement of the target exemplar to either the upper left or right screen quadrant, according to category membership. Category membership was defined either by visual-only, auditory-only or multisensory information. As early as 6 years of age, children demonstrated greater performance on the incidental categorization task following exposure to multisensory audiovisual cues compared to unisensory information. These findings provide important insight into the use of multisensory information in learning, and particularly on incidental category learning. Implications for the deployment of multisensory learning tasks within education across development will be discussed.


Asunto(s)
Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Adulto , Factores de Edad , Atención , Niño , Señales (Psicología) , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Movimiento , Estimulación Luminosa , Adulto Joven
8.
Child Dev ; 89(3): e229-e244, 2018 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28397243

RESUMEN

Differential experience leads infants to have perceptual processing advantages for own- over other-race faces, but whether this experience has downstream consequences is unknown. Three experiments examined whether 7-month-olds (range = 5.9-8.5 months; N = 96) use gaze from own- versus other-race adults to anticipate events. When gaze predicted an event's occurrence with 100% reliability, 7-month-olds followed both adults equally; with 25% (chance) reliability, neither was followed. However, with 50% (uncertain) reliability, infants followed own- over other-race gaze. Differential face race experience may thus affect how infants use social cues from own- versus other-race adults for learning. Such findings suggest that infants integrate online statistical reliability information with prior knowledge of own versus other race to guide social interaction and learning.


Asunto(s)
Desarrollo Infantil/fisiología , Reconocimiento Facial/fisiología , Fijación Ocular/fisiología , Conducta del Lactante/fisiología , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Grupos Raciales , Percepción Social , Incertidumbre , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Masculino
9.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 172: 59-72, 2018 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29587131

RESUMEN

Past research investigating cognitive flexibility has shown that preschool children make many perseverative errors in tasks that require switching between different sets of rules. However, this inflexibility might not necessarily hold with easier tasks. The current study investigated the developmental differences in cognitive flexibility using a task-switching procedure that compared reaction times and accuracy in 4- and 6-year-olds with those in adults. The experiment involved simple target detection tasks and was intentionally designed in a way that the stimulus and response conflicts were minimal together with a long preparation window. Global mixing costs (performance costs when multiple tasks are relevant in a context), and local switch costs (performance costs due to switching to an alternative task) are typically thought to engage endogenous control processes. If this is the case, we should observe developmental differences with both of these costs. Our results show, however, that when the accuracy was good, there were no age differences in cognitive flexibility (i.e., the ability to manage multiple tasks and to switch between tasks) between children and adults. Even though preschool children had slower reaction times and were less accurate, the mixing and switch costs associated with task switching were not reliably larger for preschool children. Preschool children did, however, show more commission errors and greater response repetition effects than adults, which may reflect differences in inhibitory control.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Adulto , Niño , Preescolar , Señales (Psicología) , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Pruebas Neuropsicológicas , Estimulación Luminosa , Adulto Joven
10.
Dev Sci ; 20(5)2017 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27747976

RESUMEN

This study investigates whether infants are sensitive to backward and forward transitional probabilities within temporal and spatial visual streams. Two groups of 8-month-old infants were familiarized with an artificial grammar of shapes, comprising backward and forward base pairs (i.e. two shapes linked by strong backward or forward transitional probability) and part-pairs (i.e. two shapes with weak transitional probabilities in both directions). One group viewed the continuous visual stream as a temporal sequence, while the other group viewed the same stream as a spatial array. Following familiarization, infants looked longer at test trials containing part-pairs than base pairs, although they had appeared with equal frequency during familiarization. This pattern of looking time was evident for both forward and backward pairs, in both the temporal and spatial conditions. Further, differences in looking time to part-pairs that were consistent or inconsistent with the predictive direction of the base pairs (forward or backward) indicated that infants were indeed sensitive to direction when presented with temporal sequences, but not when presented with spatial arrays. These results suggest that visual statistical learning is flexible in infancy and depends on the nature of visual input.


Asunto(s)
Desarrollo Infantil/fisiología , Aprendizaje , Percepción Espacial/fisiología , Percepción del Tiempo/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Factores de Edad , Análisis de Varianza , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Masculino , Estimulación Luminosa , Probabilidad , Factores de Tiempo
11.
Psychol Sci ; 25(9): 1730-8, 2014 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25022277

RESUMEN

Across two eye-tracking experiments, we showed that infants are sensitive to the statistical reliability of informative cues and selective in their use of information generated by such cues. We familiarized 8-month-olds with faces (Experiment 1) or arrows (Experiment 2) that cued the locations of animated animals with different degrees of reliability. The reliable cue always cued a box containing an animation, whereas the unreliable cue cued a box that contained an animation only 25% of the time. At test, infants searched longer in the boxes that were reliably cued, but did not search longer in the boxes that were unreliably cued. At generalization, when boxes were cued that never contained animations before, only infants in the face experiment followed the reliable cue. These results provide the first evidence that even young infants can track the reliability of potential informants and use this information judiciously to modify their future behavior.


Asunto(s)
Desarrollo Infantil , Señales (Psicología) , Aprendizaje , Percepción Social , Medidas del Movimiento Ocular , Cara , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Masculino
12.
Psychol Sci ; 25(7): 1371-9, 2014 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24815614

RESUMEN

Individual differences in fixation duration are considered a reliable measure of attentional control in adults. However, the degree to which individual differences in fixation duration in infancy (0-12 months) relate to temperament and behavior in childhood is largely unknown. In the present study, data were examined from 120 infants (mean age = 7.69 months, SD = 1.90) who previously participated in an eye-tracking study. At follow-up, parents completed age-appropriate questionnaires about their child's temperament and behavior (mean age of children = 41.59 months, SD = 9.83). Mean fixation duration in infancy was positively associated with effortful control (ß = 0.20, R (2) = .02, p = .04) and negatively with surgency (ß = -0.37, R (2) = .07, p = .003) and hyperactivity-inattention (ß = -0.35, R (2) = .06, p = .005) in childhood. These findings suggest that individual differences in mean fixation duration in infancy are linked to attentional and behavioral control in childhood.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Control de la Conducta/psicología , Fijación Ocular , Individualidad , Padres/psicología , Temperamento , Preescolar , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Modelos Lineales , Masculino , Encuestas y Cuestionarios
13.
Child Dev ; 85(5): 1981-94, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24646174

RESUMEN

With many features competing for attention in their visual environment, infants must learn to deploy attention toward informative cues while ignoring distractions. Three eye tracking experiments were conducted to investigate whether 6- and 8-month-olds (total N = 102) would shift attention away from a distractor stimulus to learn a cue-reward relation. While 8-month-olds showed evidence of increasingly selective attention toward the predictive cues, even when the distractors were highly salient, 6-month-olds shifted attention toward the predictive cues only when the distractors were equally (not more) engaging. These experiments suggest that attention in infancy is highly dependent on the relative weightings of predictiveness and visual salience, which may differ across development and context.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Desarrollo Infantil/fisiología , Conducta del Lactante/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Factores de Edad , Señales (Psicología) , Medidas del Movimiento Ocular , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Masculino , Recompensa
14.
Dev Sci ; 16(5): 760-71, 2013 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24033580

RESUMEN

Young infants have demonstrated a remarkable sensitivity to probabilistic relations among visual features (Fiser & Aslin, 2002; Kirkham et al., 2002). Previous research has raised important questions regarding the usefulness of statistical learning in an environment filled with variability and noise, such as an infant's natural world. In an eye-tracking experiment, 8-month-old infants viewed sequences of spatio-temporal events with three different transitional probabilities (1.0-Deterministic, 0.75-High probability, and 0.5-Low probability). Across two between-subjects conditions, the sequences were presented with or without competing visual distracters. Results show that as transitional probability decreased, infants distributed less attention to the predictable locations and their anticipations were less often correct. With no distraction, infants had faster saccadic latencies to the high probability events; however, with distracters present in the stimulus environment, infants' eye movements shifted to favour the deterministic relations. These findings suggest that infants integrate multiple sources of variability to guide visual attention and facilitate the detection and learning of statistically reliable events.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Desarrollo Infantil , Movimientos Oculares/fisiología , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Probabilidad , Humanos , Lactante , Estimulación Luminosa , Factores de Tiempo
15.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 113(3): 430-9, 2012 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22867888

RESUMEN

Dynamic spatial indexing is the ability to encode, remember, and track the location of complex events. For example, in a previous study, 6-month-old infants were familiarized to a toy making a particular sound in a particular location, and later they fixated that empty location when they heard the sound presented alone (Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004, Vol. 133, pp. 46-62). The basis and developmental trajectory of this ability are currently unclear. We investigated dynamic spatial indexing across the first year after birth and tested the hypothesis that the structure of visual cues supports infants' learning of sound and location associations. In our study, 3-, 6-, and 10-month-olds were tested in a dynamic spatial indexing eye movement paradigm that paired two sounds with two locations. In one condition, these were reliably paired with two sets of visual features (two toys condition), replicating the original studies. We also presented a single set of visual cues in both locations (one toy condition) and multiple sets of visual features in both locations (six toys condition). Infants from 3 months of age onward showed evidence of dynamic spatial indexing in the two toys condition, but only the 10-month-olds succeeded in the one toy and six toys conditions. We argue that this may reflect a broader developmental trajectory, whereby infants first make use of multiple cue integration but with age are able to learn from a narrow set of cues.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje por Asociación , Desarrollo Infantil , Orientación , Localización de Sonidos , Percepción Espacial , Señales (Psicología) , Movimientos Oculares , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Masculino
16.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 107(2): 118-36, 2010 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20627258

RESUMEN

Human infants develop a variety of attentional mechanisms that allow them to extract relevant information from a cluttered multimodal world. We know that both social and nonsocial cues shift infants' attention, but not how these cues differentially affect learning of multimodal events. Experiment 1 used social cues to direct 8- and 4-month-olds' attention to two audiovisual events (i.e., animations of a cat or dog accompanied by particular sounds) while identical distractor events played in another location. Experiment 2 directed 8-month-olds' attention with colorful flashes to the same events. Experiment 3 measured baseline learning without attention cues both with the familiarization and test trials (no cue condition) and with only the test trials (test control condition). The 8-month-olds exposed to social cues showed specific learning of audiovisual events. The 4-month-olds displayed only general spatial learning from social cues, suggesting that specific learning of audiovisual events from social cues may be a function of experience. Infants cued with the colorful flashes looked indiscriminately to both cued locations during test (similar to the 4-month-olds learning from social cues) despite attending for equal duration to the training trials as the 8-month-olds with the social cues. Results from Experiment 3 indicated that the learning effects in Experiments 1 and 2 resulted from exposure to the different cues and multimodal events. We discuss these findings in terms of the perceptual differences and relevance of the cues.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Señales (Psicología) , Conducta del Lactante/fisiología , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Orientación/fisiología , Conducta Social , Factores de Edad , Movimientos Oculares/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Conducta del Lactante/psicología , Masculino , Reconocimiento en Psicología/fisiología
17.
Front Psychol ; 10: 381, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30863348

RESUMEN

Creativity is considered an important skill in learning but little is known about the environmental factors affecting it in classroom settings. Extending adult findings, this study assessed whether moderate multi-talker noise promotes children's creativity, and whether this is modulated by children's age, working memory, and selective attention. Forty-four elementary school children between 5 and 11 years of age, divided into younger and older age groups, participated in this within-subjects' study. The children completed two idea generation tasks; each participant performed the task both in silence and in moderate (64 dB) classroom noise. Selective attention skills, verbal and visuospatial working memory were assessed with behavioral tasks. Results showed that there were no conditions in which classroom noise promoted children's creativity whilst some negative effects of noise were observed. Younger children (between 5 and 8 years of age) with low selective attention skills were especially at risk: they gave fewer ideas in the presence of noise, and these ideas were rated as less original. Children with good selective attention skills were globally protected against the effects of noise, performing, similarly, in silence and noise. Future studies about children's specific creative strategies might help shed light on the mechanisms underlying these effects.

18.
Dev Psychol ; 55(10): 2048-2059, 2019 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31393138

RESUMEN

The current study investigates whether informative, mutually redundant audiovisual cues support better performance in a category learning paradigm. Research suggests that, under some conditions, redundant multisensory cues supports better learning, when compared with unisensory cues. This was examined systematically across two experiments. In Experiment 1, children aged 5, 7, and 10 years were allocated to 1 of the 3 "modality" conditions (audio informative only, visual informative only, and audiovisual informative) and explicitly instructed to learn the category membership of individual exemplars, as determined by a threshold of correct responses. Unisensory or redundant multisensory cues determined category membership, depending on the learning condition. In addition to significant main effects of age group and condition, a significant interaction between age and sensory condition was found, with 5-year-olds performing better when presented with redundant multisensory cues compared to unisensory cues. Ten-year-olds performed better with auditory informative only cues, compared to visual informative only cues, or informative but redundant multisensory cues, with no significant difference between the latter two. In Experiment 2, the multisensory condition was presented to separate groups of 5-, 7-, and 10-year-olds, examining explicit learning outcomes in the audiovisual informative condition. Results showed that children who reached threshold during training were faster, made fewer errors, and performed better during test trials. Learning appeared to be based on the visual informative cues. Findings are discussed in the context of age-related selective attention, suggesting that the value of providing multisensory informative cues to support real-world learning depends on age and instructional context. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).


Asunto(s)
Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Señales (Psicología) , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Factores de Edad , Atención , Recursos Audiovisuales , Niño , Preescolar , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino
19.
PLoS One ; 13(6): e0198870, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29912921

RESUMEN

Developmental research on flexible attentional control in young children has often focused on the role of attention in task-switching in a unimodal context. In real life, children must master the art of switching attention not only between task demands, but also between sensory modalities. Previous study has shown that young children can be efficient at switching between unimodal tasks when the situation allows, incurring no greater task-switching costs than adults. However, young children may still experience a greater demand to shift attention between modalities than older participants. To address this, we tested 4-year-olds, 6-year-olds and adults on a novel cross-modal task-switching paradigm involving multisensory detection tasks. While we found age differences in absolute reaction time and accuracy, young children and adults both exhibited strikingly similar effects in task-switching, modality-shifting, and the interaction between them. Young children did not exhibit a greater attentional bottleneck on either the task level, or on the modality level; thus, the evidence suggests that young children engaged in similar cognitive operations in the current cross-modal tasks to adult participants. It appears that cognitive operations in multisensory task configuration are relatively mature between 4 and 6 years old.


Asunto(s)
Desarrollo Infantil , Análisis y Desempeño de Tareas , Adulto , Factores de Edad , Atención , Niño , Preescolar , Cognición , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Psicología Infantil , Tiempo de Reacción
20.
Dev Psychol ; 42(6): 1103-15, 2006 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17087545

RESUMEN

Previous research has suggested that preschoolers possess a cognitive system that allows them to construct an abstract, coherent representation of causal relations among events. Such a system lets children reason retrospectively when they observe ambiguous data in a rational manner (e.g., D. M. Sobel, J. B. Tenenbaum, & A. Gopnik, 2004). However, there is little evidence that demonstrates whether younger children possess similar inferential abilities. In Experiment 1, the authors extended previous findings with older children to examine 19- and 24-month-olds' causal inferences. Twenty-four-month-olds' inferences were similar to those of preschoolers, but younger children lacked the ability to make retrospective causal inferences, perhaps because of performance limitations. In Experiment 2, the authors designed an eye-tracking paradigm to test younger participants that eliminated various manual search demands. Eight-month-olds' anticipatory eye movements, in response to retrospective data, revealed inferences similar to those of 24-month-olds in Experiment 1 and preschoolers in previous research. These data are discussed in terms of associative reasoning and causal inference.


Asunto(s)
Envejecimiento/fisiología , Desarrollo Infantil , Cognición/fisiología , Formación de Concepto/fisiología , Solución de Problemas/fisiología , Envejecimiento/psicología , Aprendizaje por Asociación/fisiología , Distribución de Chi-Cuadrado , Preescolar , Movimientos Oculares/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Juicio/fisiología , Masculino , Modelos Psicológicos , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología
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