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Psychological Development From Infancy: Image to Intention [Pehme köide]

Edited by (NICHD, USA, the Institute for Fiscal Studies, and UNICEF.), Edited by (Yale University)
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Originally published in 1979, this volume represented a unique attempt to connect the usually separated fields of infancy studies and studies of older children. In each chapter, eminent research workers attempt to cross the theoretical, empirical, and methodological barriers that had traditionally separated the study of preverbal infants from the study of verbal children and adults at the time. These completely new and original contributions traced the developmental links between birth and conversation within three major categories: perceptual, cognitive, and language development. Although the chapters range from reports of well-defined research areas to theoretical propositions, the aim throughout was to relate the events of the first year of life to the child’s later perceptual and cognitive activity. This book will still be of interest for all concerned with child development and related areas, in that it demonstrates the remarkable range of observations about infants brought under a single guiding set of questions about continuity, stability, and the sources of change during and after the first year of life.

Series Prologue v
Preface xv
1 Introduction
1(8)
William Kessen
Introduction
1(4)
References
5(4)
PART I PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR DEVELOPMENT
2 Perspectives on Infant Motor System Development
9(28)
Claire B. Kopp
Introduction
9(1)
Reflections
10(4)
An Expanded View
14(1)
The Period of Ontogenesis
15(8)
Functional Maturation
23(6)
Comments
29(1)
References
30(7)
3 Perceptual Development: Stability and Change in Feature Perception
37(46)
Marc H. Bornstein
Introduction
37(1)
Perceptual Features
38(2)
Mature Feature Perception
40(6)
Immature Feature Perception: Innate Knowledge?
46(6)
The Biology of Perceptual Features
52(4)
Experience and Perceptual Development
56(14)
Meaning, Function, and Significance of Perceptual Features
70(4)
References
74(9)
4 The Origins of Facial Pattern Recognition
83(32)
Joseph F. Fagan
Introduction
83(1)
Operational Definitions
84(1)
Differentiation at Five to Seven Months
84(8)
Limiting Conditions
92(9)
Detection of Invariant Features
101(4)
Facilitation of Recognition
105(4)
Summary and Discussion
109(2)
References
111(4)
5 Spatial Reference Systems in Perceptual Development
115(32)
Herbert L. Pick Jr.
Albert Yonas
John Rieser
Introduction
115(1)
Tasks and Reference Systems
116(15)
How Frames of Reference are Used
131(11)
References
142(5)
6 Commentary
147(12)
Eleanor J. Gibson etal
PART II COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
7 Structure and Process in the Human Infant: The Ontogeny of Mental Representation
159(24)
Jerome Kagan
Introduction: What We Ask of the Infant
159(1)
The Historical Bases for Faith in Continuity
160(3)
Cognitive Development in Infancy
163(7)
Developmental Changes in Reaction to Discrepant Experience
170(9)
Structure and Process
179(1)
Summary and Implications
180(1)
References
181(2)
8 Qualitative Transitions in Behavioral Development in the First Two Years of Life
183(42)
Robert B. McCall
Introduction
183(1)
General Orientation
184(6)
Overview of the Conceptual Orientation
190(5)
Description of Stages
195(22)
Epilogue
217(1)
References
218(7)
9 The Figurative and the Operative in Piagetian Psychology
225(26)
David Elkind
Introduction
225(1)
The Figurative and the Operative
226(5)
Conceptions of Development from Infancy
231(7)
The Figurative/Operative Distinction and Other Conceptions of Development
238(3)
Implications
241(5)
Conclusions
246(1)
References
247(4)
10 From Adaptive Responses to Social Cognition: The Learning View of Development
251(18)
Hanus Papousek
Introduction
251(1)
Infant Observation and Experimentation as a Beginning
251(2)
Why Begin Psychological Research in Infancy?
253(1)
Conditioning, Learning, and Cognition
254(7)
Social Interaction and Play
261(2)
Future Directions
263(3)
References
266(3)
11 Commentary
269(10)
Paul Mussen
PART III LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
12 Acquiring the Concept of the Dialogue
279(28)
H. Rudolph Schaffer
Introduction
279(1)
The Social or the Lonely Infant?
279(2)
Temporal Patterning in Early Interaction
281(2)
Social Preadaptation
283(4)
The Parent's Role
287(5)
The Infant's Interactive Achievements
292(4)
Cognitive Mechanisms and Social Development
296(5)
Conclusions
301(1)
References
302(5)
13 The Role of Language in Infant Development
307(32)
Katherine Nelson
Introduction
307(1)
Cognitive Prerequisites
308(10)
The Communication Component
318(3)
The Missing Link: Development From 12 to 18 Months
321(6)
The Coordination of the Social and Object Worlds In and Out of Language
327(4)
Language and the Coordination of Social and Object Worlds
331(2)
Summary and Conclusion
333(1)
References
334(5)
14 Dialectical Approaches to Early Thought and Language
339(34)
Arnold J. Sameroff
Adrlenne E. Harris
Introduction
339(2)
Dialectics of Development
341(15)
Dialectics and Language Development
356(11)
Conclusions
367(1)
References
368(5)
15 Commentary: A Trialogue on Dialogue
373(10)
Jean M. Mandler
Biographical Notes 383(6)
Author Index 389(12)
Subject Index 401
Marc H. Bornstein, William Kessen