Progress in infancy Research

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acuity
Autobiographical Memory
Autobiographical Memory Development
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Children's Autobiographical Memory
Children's Verbal Memory
Children’s Autobiographical Memory
Children’s Verbal Memory
Contrast Sensitivity
Contrast Threshold
developmental psychology research
early childhood behavioral mechanisms
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Equivalent Noise
F0 Variability
grating
Grating Acuity
hidden
Hidden Objects
Hidden Units
infant cognitive development
internal
Latent Memories
Maternal Style
memory
Memory Development
memory formation infants
motor skill acquisition
neural network modeling infants
object
objects
occluded
Occluded Object
Reaching System
representation
Risky Slopes
sensory processing infancy
Simple Search Tasks
Sinewave Grating
Slope Boundary
Spatial Frequency
Stimulus Blur
Verbal Memory Skills
vernier
Vernier Acuity
Vernier Offsets

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805839449
  • Weight: 770g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Progress in Infancy Research Series is dedicated to the presentation of innovative and exciting research on infants, both human and animal. Each volume in the series is designed to stand alone and contains autonomous chapters which are based on high quality programs of research with infants. These chapters integrate the work of the authors with that of other experts working in the same or related areas. The authors wish to present high quality critical syntheses bearing on infant perception and sensation, learning and memory processes, and other aspects of development. This series will be a forum for the presentation of technological breakthroughs, methodological advances, and new integrations that might create platforms for future programmatic work on the complexities of infant behavior and development.

Each volume in the series is dedicated to an outstanding investigator whose research has illuminated the nature of infant behavior and development, and whose contributions to the field have been of seminal importance.

Jeffrey W. Fagen, Harlene Hayne