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The development of young infants' intuitions about support

✍ Scribed by Baillargeon, Renée ;Needham, Amy ;Devos, Julie


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1992
Weight
918 KB
Volume
1
Category
Article
ISSN
1057-3593

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Previous research has shown that Smonth-old infants, like adults, expect a box to be stable when it is in full contact with a platform, and to fall when it loses all contact with the platform. Do young infants also have expectations about what should happen when the box is only in partial contact with the platform? The present research was designed to address this question. In Experiment 1,6.5-monthold infants saw two test events: a full-contact and a partial-contact test event. In both events, the infants watched the extended finger of a gloved hand push a box along the top of a platform. In the fullcontact event, the box was pushed until its leading edge reached the end of the platform. In the partial-contact event, the box was pushed until only 15% or 7P/o of its bottom surface remained on the platform. The infants looked reliably longer at the partial-than at the full-contact event when 15%, but not 709'0, of the box rested on the platform. These results suggested that the infants were able to judge how much contact was needed between the box and the platform for the box to be stable. A control condition provided evidence for this interpretation. In Experiment 2, 5.5-to Cmonthold infants were found to look equally at the full-and the partialcontact events, even when only 15% of the box's bottom surface remained on the platform. This result suggested that prior to 6.5 months of age infants perceive any amount of contact between the box and the platform to be sufficient to ensure the box's stability.


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