Series Prologue |
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Preface |
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xv | |
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1 | (8) |
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1 | (4) |
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5 | (4) |
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PART I PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR DEVELOPMENT |
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2 Perspectives on Infant Motor System Development |
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9 | (28) |
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9 | (1) |
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10 | (4) |
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14 | (1) |
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The Period of Ontogenesis |
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15 | (8) |
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23 | (6) |
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29 | (1) |
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30 | (7) |
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3 Perceptual Development: Stability and Change in Feature Perception |
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37 | (46) |
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37 | (1) |
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38 | (2) |
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Mature Feature Perception |
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40 | (6) |
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Immature Feature Perception: Innate Knowledge? |
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46 | (6) |
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The Biology of Perceptual Features |
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52 | (4) |
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Experience and Perceptual Development |
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56 | (14) |
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Meaning, Function, and Significance of Perceptual Features |
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70 | (4) |
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74 | (9) |
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4 The Origins of Facial Pattern Recognition |
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83 | (32) |
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83 | (1) |
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84 | (1) |
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Differentiation at Five to Seven Months |
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84 | (8) |
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92 | (9) |
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Detection of Invariant Features |
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101 | (4) |
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Facilitation of Recognition |
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105 | (4) |
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109 | (2) |
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111 | (4) |
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5 Spatial Reference Systems in Perceptual Development |
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115 | (32) |
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115 | (1) |
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Tasks and Reference Systems |
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116 | (15) |
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How Frames of Reference are Used |
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131 | (11) |
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142 | (5) |
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147 | (12) |
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PART II COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT |
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7 Structure and Process in the Human Infant: The Ontogeny of Mental Representation |
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159 | (24) |
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Introduction: What We Ask of the Infant |
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159 | (1) |
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The Historical Bases for Faith in Continuity |
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160 | (3) |
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Cognitive Development in Infancy |
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163 | (7) |
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Developmental Changes in Reaction to Discrepant Experience |
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170 | (9) |
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179 | (1) |
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180 | (1) |
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181 | (2) |
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8 Qualitative Transitions in Behavioral Development in the First Two Years of Life |
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183 | (42) |
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183 | (1) |
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184 | (6) |
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Overview of the Conceptual Orientation |
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190 | (5) |
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195 | (22) |
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217 | (1) |
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218 | (7) |
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9 The Figurative and the Operative in Piagetian Psychology |
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225 | (26) |
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225 | (1) |
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The Figurative and the Operative |
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226 | (5) |
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Conceptions of Development from Infancy |
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231 | (7) |
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The Figurative/Operative Distinction and Other Conceptions of Development |
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238 | (3) |
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241 | (5) |
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246 | (1) |
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247 | (4) |
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10 From Adaptive Responses to Social Cognition: The Learning View of Development |
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251 | (18) |
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251 | (1) |
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Infant Observation and Experimentation as a Beginning |
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251 | (2) |
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Why Begin Psychological Research in Infancy? |
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253 | (1) |
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Conditioning, Learning, and Cognition |
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254 | (7) |
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Social Interaction and Play |
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261 | (2) |
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263 | (3) |
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266 | (3) |
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269 | (10) |
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PART III LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT |
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12 Acquiring the Concept of the Dialogue |
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279 | (28) |
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279 | (1) |
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The Social or the Lonely Infant? |
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279 | (2) |
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Temporal Patterning in Early Interaction |
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281 | (2) |
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283 | (4) |
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287 | (5) |
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The Infant's Interactive Achievements |
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292 | (4) |
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Cognitive Mechanisms and Social Development |
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296 | (5) |
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301 | (1) |
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302 | (5) |
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13 The Role of Language in Infant Development |
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307 | (32) |
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307 | (1) |
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308 | (10) |
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The Communication Component |
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318 | (3) |
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The Missing Link: Development From 12 to 18 Months |
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321 | (6) |
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The Coordination of the Social and Object Worlds In and Out of Language |
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327 | (4) |
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Language and the Coordination of Social and Object Worlds |
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331 | (2) |
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333 | (1) |
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334 | (5) |
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14 Dialectical Approaches to Early Thought and Language |
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339 | (34) |
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339 | (2) |
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Dialectics of Development |
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341 | (15) |
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Dialectics and Language Development |
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356 | (11) |
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367 | (1) |
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368 | (5) |
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15 Commentary: A Trialogue on Dialogue |
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373 | (10) |
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Biographical Notes |
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383 | (6) |
Author Index |
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389 | (12) |
Subject Index |
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401 | |