chapter 5 infancy: cognitive development. cognitive development: jean piaget

34
CHAPTER 5 CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Infancy: Cognitive Development Development

Upload: barrie-mitchell

Post on 16-Dec-2015

236 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

CHAPTER 5CHAPTER 5

Infancy: Cognitive DevelopmentInfancy: Cognitive Development

Page 2: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Cognitive Development: Jean PiagetCognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Page 3: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Cognitive Development – Jean Piaget

• Piaget hypothesized that cognitive processes develop in an orderly sequence of stages (4).

• Stage 1: Sensorimotor• Stage 2: Preoperational• Stage 3: Concrete operational• Stage 4: Formal operational

Page 4: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Piaget Basics

• Schemes

-Children’s concepts of the world

• Cognitive development

-Way of perceiving and mentally representing the world

• Assimilation

-Absorbing new events into existing schemes

• Accommodation

-Modifying existing schemes when assimilation does not allow the child to make sense of novel events

Page 5: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Sensorimotor Stage• Refers to 0-2 years of cognitive development

• First substage (1st month after birth)-Dominated by assimilation of sources of stimulation into inborn reflexes such as grasping, visual tracking.

• Second substage (1 to 4 months)P

rimary circular reactions

-characterized by beginnings of the ability to coordinate various sensorimotor schemes-focus on the infant’s own body rather than on external

environment

Page 6: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Sensorimotor Stage (cont’d)• Third substage (4 to 8 months)

Secondary circular reactions

-include repeated patterns of activity due to effect on the environment-focus shifts objects and environmental events

• Fourth substage (8 to 12 months)-Infants begin to show intentional, goal-directed behavior in which they differentiate between the means of achieving a goal and the goal or end itself

• Fifth substage (12 to 18 months)T

ertiary circular reactions

-purposeful adaptations of established schemes to specific situations

Page 7: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Sensorimotor Stage (cont’d)

• Sixth substage (18 to 24 months)

-Transition between sensorimotor development and the development of symbolic thought

-External exploration replaced by mental exploration

-Use imitation to symbolize or stand for a plan of action

• Object permanence

-Recognition that an object or person continues to exist when

out of sight

-Advances in the development of the object concept by about

the sixth month

Page 8: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Fig. 5-1, p. 95

Page 9: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Evaluation of Piaget

Confirmation

• Remains a comprehensive model of infant cognition

• Many of his own observations of his own infants have been confirmed by others.

• Pattern and sequence of events he described have been observed among American, European, African, and Asian infants

Page 10: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Piaget Criticisms

– Cognitive development not as tied to discrete stages

– Emphasis on maturation with exclusion of adult and peer influences on cognitive development

– Underestimation of infants’ competence• Infants display object permanence earlier than Piaget

believed.• Infants display deferred imitation as early as 9 months and

not 18 months as Piaget believed.

Page 11: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Information ProcessingInformation Processing

Page 12: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Information Processing

Memory• Memory improves between 2 and 6 months of age.• Older infants more capable of encoding than younger

ones• Infant memory can be improved if infants receive a

reminder.

Deferred Imitation

-Imitation of actions after a time delay occurs as early as 6 months

-Imitation of neonates likely reflexive

Page 13: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Fig. 5-2, p. 96

Page 14: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Fig. 5-2, p. 97

Page 15: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Mirror Neurons

• Activated when the individual performs a motor act or observes another individual engaging in the same act

• Also connected with emotions in humans– The frontal lobe is active when people experience

emotions such as disgust, happiness, pain, and also when they observe another person experiencing an emotion

• Has been suggested that mirror neurons are connected with the built-in human capacity to acquire language

Page 16: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Individual Differences in Individual Differences in Intelligence Among InfantsIntelligence Among Infants

Page 17: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Individual Differences in Intelligence Among Infants

• Understanding of infants’ intelligence based on scales of infant development

• Bayley Scales of Infant Development-Consists of 178 mental-scale items and 111 motor-scale

items

-Mental scale assesses verbal communication, perceptual skills, learning and memory, and problem-solving skills

-Motor scale assesses gross and fine motor skills -Behavior rating scale based on examiner observation of the child during the test also used

• Testing used to identify handicaps

Page 18: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Instability of Intelligence Scores Attained in Infancy

• Scores obtained during first year of life correlated moderately with scores obtained a year later.

• Bayley scales and socioeconomic status were able to predict cognitive development among LBW children from 18 months to 4 years.

• Bayley and other scales do not predict school grades or IQ scores very well.

• Bayley scales are best at identifying gross lags in development and relative strengths and weaknesses.

Page 19: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Table 5-1, p. 98

Page 20: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Use of Visual Recognition Memory

• Visual recognition memory- Ability to discriminate previously seen objects from novel objects;

procedure based on habituation

• Children with greater visual recognition memory attained higher IQ scores.

• Individual differences in capacity for visual recognition memory are stable.

• Capacity for visual recognition memory increases over first year after birth.

• Studies on visual recognition memory and later IQ scores show good predictive validity for broad cognitive abilities throughout childhood.

Page 21: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Language DevelopmentLanguage Development

Page 22: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Early Vocalizations• Children develop language according to an invariant sequence of steps or stages.• Language begins with prelinguistic vocalizations.

-Cooing (2n

d

month)

-Infants use tongues, vowel-like sounds-Appears to be linked to pleasure

-Babbling (6-9 months)

-Combination of consonants and vowels

• Echolalia (10-12 months)-Infants repeat syllables

• Intonation (end of 1st year)-Use of patterns that rise and fall; resembles adult speech

Page 23: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Table 5-2, p. 101

Page 24: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Development of Vocabulary

• First word -

Spoken between 11-13 months

-Brief and consist of one or two

syllables

• Vocabulary acquisition-

Slow at first

-3 or 4 months from when the first word is spoken, children learn 10-30 words

-18-month-old vocabulary may be 50 words

-22-month-old vocabulary may be 300 words

• General nominals

-Similar to nouns

-Includes names of classes of objects

• Specific nominals

-Proper nouns

Page 25: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Overextension

• Overextension– Children extend the meaning of one word to refer to

things and actions for which they do not have words.– Overextensions gradually pulled back to proper

references

Page 26: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Development of Sentences

• Telegraphic speech-Brief expressions that have meanings of sentences

• Mean length of utterance (MLU)-Average number of morphemes that communicators use in their sentences

• Morphemes-Smallest units of meaning in a language

-e.g. Walked is two morphemes: walk = verb, -ed = past-tense suffix

• MLU increases rapidly once speech begins

Page 27: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Fig. 5-5, p. 103

Page 28: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Development of Sentences (cont’d)

• Holophrases

-Single words that are used to express complex meanings

-e.g., “Mama” means… “There goes Mama”

• Telegraphic speech-Two-word sentences

-e.g., “That ball”; words is and a are implied

-Shows understanding of syntax

-Rules in a language for placing words in order to form sentences

Page 29: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Theories of Language Development• Nurture view

-Holds that a child learns the language that the family speaks1

. Imitation

-Children learn language, at least in part, by observation and imitation.2

. Reinforcement

-Children learn language due to the social cues of smiling, stroking, and talking back to them.

Extinction

-Foreign sounds drop out due to the lack of reinforcement.

Shaping

-Reinforcing children’s utterances as they approximate actual words (may be selective)

Page 30: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Theories of Language Development (cont’d)

• Nature

-Holds that children have inborn tendency in the form of neurological “pre-wiring” to language learning

• Psycholinguistic theory

-Language acquisition involves interaction between

environmental influences.

-Innate tendency labeled language acquisition device (LAD)

-Inborn tendency supported by studies of deaf children and in

the language development among all languages

Page 31: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Theories of Language Development (cont’d)

• Surface and deep structure

-On the surface, languages differ in vocabulary and grammar.

-However, languages share “universal grammar” allowing for

transforming ideas into sentences.

• Chomsky maintains children are genetically pre-wired to attend to language and deduce the rules for constructing sentences from ideas.

Page 32: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Brain Structures Involved in Language

• Biological structures of LAD based in left hemisphere of the cerebral cortex for nearly all right-handed people and for 2 out of 3 left-handed

• Damage to Broca’s or Wernicke’s area called aphasia

-Disruption in the ability to understand or produce language

-Located left hemisphere

• Broca’s aphasia

-Can understand but not reproduce speech well

• Wernicke’s aphasia

-Can speak freely with proper syntax

-Have trouble understanding speech and finding the words to express themselves

Page 33: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

Fig. 5-6, p. 107

Page 34: CHAPTER 5 Infancy: Cognitive Development. Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget

The Sensitive Period

• Language learning most efficient beginning at 18 to 24 months (sensitive period)

• During this period, neural development provides plasticity of the brain.

• Damage to the brain easier to heal the younger the child

• Social contacts important in the development of language

• Malnutrition and abuse can contribute to poor language learning and ability.