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Variability in the early development of visual self-recognition
Authors:Mary L. Courage   Shannon C. Edison  Mark L. Howe
Affiliation:aDepartment of Psychology, Memorial University, St. John's, NL, Canada A1B 3X9;bLakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ont., Canada
Abstract:A study was conducted to evaluate the (1) developmental course and (2) the temporal sequencing of visual (mirror, photo) and verbal (personal pronoun use) measures of self-recognition as well as the ability to locate a toy from its mirror image in relation to the child's own mirror image. A microgenetic approach was adopted to assess 10 toddlers biweekly between 15 and 23 months of age and for comparison, a cross-section of children tested once across the same age range. Longitudinal data indicated that visual self-recognition emerged gradually and showed wide variability in expression prior to becoming stable, a finding masked in the cross-sectional data where performance appeared to improve abruptly. Both cross-sectional and longitudinal data confirmed that mirror self-recognition was the earliest precursor of the indices of self-recognition to emerge followed by the use of personal pronouns and photo identification. Implications for the emergence and integration of the self are discussed.
Keywords:Variability   Visual self-recognition   Cognitive development
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