Baillargeon

    Cards (14)

    • Key ideas
      • Previous research underestimated new borns abilities
      • children in the sensorimotor stage were better developed
    • Define habituation
      • This is said to occur when babies look away from an object, as it is no longer seen as new or unique
      • the baby is now comfortable/used to the object being there
    • Define nativism
      The idea that babies are born with some innate abilities
    • What is the physical reasoning system (PRS)
      • PRS is the basic understanding that infants have of the physical world and the ability to learn easily
      • the nature of the PRS means that they are prone to paying attention to new events as it can help them develop their understanding
      • e.g object permanence helps them to learn about occlusion (an object still exists even when you can’t see it)
    • What is the study
      Violation of expectation
    • What was the aim of the violation of expectation study
      To provide an explanation for early infant abilities
    • What was the sample of the violation of expectation study
      24 infants, aged 5 - 6 months
    • What was the procedure of the violation of expectation study
      • Familiarisation event - the infants were shown a small and tall rabbit passing behind a screen, where the object would disappear them reappear
      • test events (expected and unexpected)
      • expected - a small rabbit would pass behind the screen and it wouldn’t be shown when it passed the screen as it was too small
      • unexpected - a tall rabbit would pass being a screen but it could also not been seen when it passed the window even thought it was tall enough
    • What were the findings of the violation of expectation study
      • The infants spent longer looking at the unexpected event (33 seconds) than the expected event (25 seconds)
      • this suggests that they were surprised by the unexpected event, which means they must have known that the tall rabbit should have been visible when it passed the window
    • What were the limitations
      • Counterpoint - Piaget
      • may not be object permanence
    • What was the strength
      Validity of the violation of expectation experiment
    • Evaluation - validity of the VoE experiment
      • The method removes the confounding variable
      • the amount of time that the child looks at the object is only measured by the direct contact not whilst the child looks away when distracted
      • Piaget stated that once a child looks away from an object they no longer think it exists
    • Evaluation - counterpoint
      • Piaget pointed out that although the children are paying attention it doesn’t necessarily mean they understand it
      • their longer response to the unexpected event doesn’t represent a change in their cognitive ability
    • Evaluation - may not be object permanence
      • It is assumed that the response made to the violation of expectation is linked to the unexpectedness of the event
      • all it shows is that babies find certain objects more interesting
      • it is inferring a link between the response and object permanence