TV guide: two-year-old children learn to use video as a source of information |
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Authors: | Troseth Georgene L |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37203, USA. georgene.troseth@vanderbilt.edu |
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Abstract: | Learning to use symbols is a challenge for young children even when the symbol in question (e.g., a live video image) is iconic and seems transparent to adults. This research examined the effect of experience on children's use of video-presented information. Two-year-old children saw themselves "live" on their family television for 2 weeks and then participated in an object-retrieval task. The children reliably used a live video presentation of an adult hiding a toy in an adjoining room to find the toy. Most also transferred what they learned to a task involving another symbol (pictures) that typically is very difficult for this age group. The results reveal flexibility in 2-year-olds' symbol use that follows from successful representation of a symbolic relation. |
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