Rich interpretation vs. deflationary accounts in cognitive development: the case of means-end skills in 7-month-old infants |
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Authors: | Munakata Yuko Bauer David Stackhouse Tracy Landgraf Laura Huddleston Jennifer |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Denver, 2155 S. Race Street, Denver, CO 80208, USA. munakata@kore.psy.du.edu |
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Abstract: | Seven-month-old infants appear to learn means-end skills, such as pushing a button to retrieve a distant toy (Psychological Review 104 (1997) 686). The present studies tested whether such apparent means-end behaviors are genuine, or simply the repetition of trained behaviors under conditions of greatest arousal, as suggested by a dynamic systems reinterpretation. When infants were trained to repeat behaviors that did not serve as means to retrieving toys (pushing a button to light a set of distant lights), their button-pushing differed significantly from infants for whom button-pushing served as a means for retrieving toys. Further, infants demonstrated means-end skills with behaviors that they had not been trained to repeat. Implications for early means-end abilities and for debates surrounding the interpretation of infant behavior are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Rich interpretation Deflationary accounts Cognitive development |
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