Publication | Closed Access
Object Retrieval in the 1st Year of Life: Learning Effects of Task Exposure and Box Transparency.
44
Citations
42
References
2003
Year
Object CategorizationCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyEarly VisionVisual CognitionObject Retrieval TaskCognitive DevelopmentImitative LearningMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesHuman CognitionTask ExposureExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopVisual FunctionBox TransparencyInfant DevelopmentOpaque BoxProcedural MemorySpatial CognitionObject Retrieval
Before 12 months of age, infants have difficulties coordinating and sequencing their movements to retrieve an object concealed in a box. This study examined (a) whether young infants can discover effective retrieval solutions and consolidate movement coordination earlier if exposed regularly to such a task and (b) whether different environments, indexed by box transparency, would impact the rate of learning and time of discovery of these solutions. Infants (N=12) were presented with an object retrieval task every week from 6 1/2 months of age until they were able to retrieve the toy from the box using coordinated two-handed patterns for 3 weeks. To reach that criterion, infants tested with an opaque box took 2 1/2 months and infants tested with a semitransparent box took 1 1/2 months. Both groups outperformed age-matched controls who received a one-time exposure to the task. Repeated exposure to the task and vision of the toy significantly enhanced this process of solution discovery.
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