Baillargeon's Theory of Cognitive development

    Cards (32)

    • What does ZPD stand for in the context of learning?
      Zone of Proximal Development
    • What happens to the level and frequency of help given by experts as learners cross the ZPD?

      The help decreases as the learner becomes more competent
    • What does the improvement in children's knowledge with the help of experts suggest?

      It suggests that there was a gap in their knowledge initially
    • Who disagreed with Piaget's assumption about object permanence?

      Baillargeon
    • What was Baillargeon's argument against Piaget's view on object permanence?

      She argued that a lack of looking for an object does not mean a lack of understanding
    • What does the Violation of Expectation (VOE) research suggest about infants?

      It suggests that infants have expectations about how objects behave
    • How do infants react when their expectations about object behavior are violated?

      They look at the scene for a longer time due to surprise
    • What age group did Baillargeon et al. (1985) test in their study on object permanence?

      Infants aged 5-6 months
    • In the possible condition of Baillargeon's study, what could be seen passing behind the window?

      A tall rabbit could be seen, but a short rabbit could not
    • Why was the impossible condition considered 'impossible' in Baillargeon's study?

      Because it contradicted the understanding of object permanence
    • How much longer did infants look at the impossible condition compared to the possible condition?

      1. 96 seconds longer
    • What conclusion did researchers draw from the infants' longer looking time at the impossible condition?

      Infants believed the rabbit continued to exist and expected it to appear
    • At what age did Baillargeon suggest infants acquire the cognitive ability of object persistence?

      At age 5 months
    • What are the two cognitive abilities Baillargeon explored using the VOE method?

      Containment and support
    • What does containment refer to in Baillargeon's research?

      The ability to recognize that an object remains in a container after the lid is removed
    • What does support refer to in Baillargeon's research?

      The idea that an object will fall if unsupported
    • What is the physical reasoning system (PRS) according to Baillargeon?

      An innate predisposition to pay attention to surprising events
    • What do event categories represent in Baillargeon's theory?

      Ways in which two or more objects interact
    • What limitation does Piaget's method of assessing object permanence have?

      Children may lack motor abilities and interest in the object
    • How does Baillargeon's method improve upon Piaget's method?

      It requires children to simply look at the scene, removing confounding variables
    • What evidence suggests that the PRS is universal?

      Innate infantile understanding and basic physical understanding developed through experience
    • What did Hespos and van Marle (2012) conclude about core principles of physical understanding?

      They are present as early as we can test for them
    • What distinction did Bremner draw regarding infant behavior?

      Between behavioral response and behavioral understanding
    • Why might Baillargeon have overestimated the significance of her results?

      Because looking longer does not necessarily indicate understanding
    • What is a challenge in drawing causal conclusions from VOE research?

      It's difficult to judge what infants actually understand
    • What is perspective-taking?

      The ability to take on the viewpoint of another person
    • Who developed a series of stages based on perspective-taking tasks?
      Selman
    • What was the age range of children assessed by Selman in his perspective-taking study?

      4 to 6 years old
    • What was the 'Holly and her kitten' task designed to assess?

      The emotional states of Holly, her father, and her friend
    • What characterizes Level 0 of Selman's stages of perspective-taking?
      Children are socially egocentric and cannot take on others' perspectives
    • What characterizes Level 1 of Selman's stages of perspective-taking?

      Children can take on only a single perspective at a time
    • What characterizes Level 2 of Selman's stages of perspective-taking?

      Children can fully identify with another person's viewpoint but focus on one perspective