Publication | Closed Access
Psychophysical assessment of toddlers' ability to cope with slopes.
131
Citations
37
References
1995
Year
Infant PerceptionCognitionPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyEarly StagesCognitive DevelopmentChild AssessmentDevelopmental DisorderPsychophysicsPerception SystemChild PsychologyCognitive SciencePsychophysical AssessmentEarly Childhood DevelopmentBetter PerceiversExperimental PsychologyInfant CognitionChild DevelopmentPediatricsSpatial CognitionSafe SlopesHuman MovementMedicine
This research examined how infants in early stages of walking determine whether a hill is safe or risky for locomotion. A psychophysical staircase procedure provided estimates of infants' physical ability to walk up and down slopes (2 degrees to 36 degrees), and a "go ration" indexed the accuracy of their perceptual judgments. On average, perceptual judgments were scaled to walking ability on slopes. Children walked on safe slopes and balked on risky ones. For ascent, perceptual judgments were related to length of walking experience and walking skill on flat ground. Better walkers were also better perceivers. For descent, judgments neatly mirrored exploratory activity. Better perceivers explored hills more efficiently by hesitating, touching, and testing different positions on hills around the limits of their physical ability.
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