Learning About Objects in Infancy

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Author_Amy Work Needham
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Category=JMC
cognitive development research
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early action learning
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events
exploration
Familiarization Trial
independent
Independent Reaching
infant active object exploration
infant tool manipulation
Infant's Reach
infants
Infant’s Reach
Key Ring
object boundary perception
Object Exploration
Oral Exploration
Peripersonal Space
Pieraut Le Bonniec
Purple Box
reaching
Robust Adjustment
sensorimotor milestones
separate
Spoon's Handle
Spoon’s Handle
Sticky Mittens
Straight End
test
Test Box
Test Display
Tv Remote
Uneven Weight Distribution
Visual Motor Coordination
visual-motor development
Von Hofsten
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younger

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138643598
  • Weight: 204g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Mar 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How do young infants experience the world around them? How similar or different are infants’ experiences from adults’ experiences of similar situations? How do infants progress from relatively sparse knowledge and expectations early in life to much more elaborate knowledge and expectations just several months later? We know that much of infants’ learning before four to five months of age is visually-based. As they develop the ability to reach for objects independently, they can explore objects that are of particular interest to them—a new skill that must be important for their learning. Through this transition to independent reaching and exploration, infants go a long way toward forming their own understandings of the objects around them. Towards the end of the first year of life, infants begin manipulating one object relative to another and this skill sets the stage for them to begin using objects instrumentally—using one object to create changes in other objects. This new ability opens up many opportunities for infants to learn about using tools.

In this volume, Amy Work Needham provides an extensive overview of her research on infant learning, with a particular focus on how infants learn about objects. She begins with an explanation of how basic aspects of how infants’ visual exploration of objects allows them to create new knowledge about objects and object categories. She continues with a description of infants’ visual and manual learning about hand-held tools and how these tools can be used to achieve goals. Throughout, she focuses on active learning and development, which results in infants making important contributions to their own learning about objects. She concludes by synthesizing the findings discussed, pulls out recurring themes across studies, and brings together fundamental principles of how infants learn about objects.

Amy Work Needham is Professor in the Department of Psychology and Human Development in Peabody College at Vanderbilt University. For more than 20 years, she has studied the contributions of perception and action to early learning.

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