Children's strategies in producing three-dimensional relationships on a two-dimensional surface |
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Authors: | Norman Freeman Christine Eiser Janet Sayers |
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Affiliation: | University of Bristol UK;University of Kent UK |
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Abstract: | It is a common task to give children a picture containing implicit depth cues and to require them to extract depth information from it. The cues are always selected from the adult repertoire; little is known about children's production of their own cues. In this experiment, 5- to 10-year-old children were required to draw one object behind another in a situation in which adults invariably produce the further object partially occluded by the nearer. The results were an age-related decline in the tendency to segregate the objects and an increase in the tendency to group the objects using partial occlusion, with a cross-over at 8 years. At all ages some children drew one object inside the boundary of the other. It is argued that the results are composed of two tendencies, a gradual mastery of discrete scaling phenomena (e.g., “up” on the page means “further”) within a given style, and a set of decisions to be made between incompatible styles. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be addressed to N. H. Freeman Department of Psychology 8–10 Berkeley Square Bristol BS8 1HH UK |
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