Eight‐Month‐Old Infants' Perception of Possible and Impossible Events
- 1 October 2000
- Vol. 1 (4) , 429-446
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327078in0104_4
Abstract
This study investigated 8-month-old infants' perception of object permanence in an extension of the rotating screen studies by Baillargeon (1987) and Baillargeon, Spelke, and Wasserman (1985). Using computer-animated stimuli similar to the "live" stimuli used by Baillargeon and her colleagues (Baillargeon, 1987; Baillargeon et al., 1985), 48 8-month-old infants were habituated to 1 of 4 computer-animated events and then tested on all 4 events. The events involved a screen that rotated in either a 180° or 120° arc*** and a block that either was sitting in the path of the rotating screen or absent from the event. The results provided no evidence that infants responded on the basis of the possibility or impossibility of the events as claimed by Baillargeon and her colleagues, but instead indicated that the infants responded on the basis of perceptual novelty. These results are consistent with the findings of Schilling (this issue) and Bogartz, Shinskey, and Schilling (this issue). Taken together, along with the findings of Rivera, Wakeley, and Langer (1999), these more recent findings suggest that Baillargeon's (1987; Baillargeon et al., 1985) results should not be interpreted as definitive evidence of object permanence in very young infants.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nativism, empiricism, and the origins of knowledgeInfant Behavior and Development, 1998
- Who put the cog in infant cognition? Is rich interpretation too costly?Infant Behavior and Development, 1998
- Object representation, identity, and the paradox of early permanence: Steps toward a new frameworkInfant Behavior and Development, 1998
- Rethinking infant knowledge: Toward an adaptive process account of successes and failures in object permanence tasks.Psychological Review, 1997
- Interpreting infant looking: The event set × event set design.Developmental Psychology, 1997
- Young infant's perception of object unity in two-dimensional displaysInfant Behavior and Development, 1995
- Object Permanence in Young Infants: Further EvidenceChild Development, 1991
- Object Permanence in Young Infants: Further EvidenceChild Development, 1991
- Object permanence in 3½- and 4½-month-old infants.Developmental Psychology, 1987
- Familiarity and novelty preferences in infant recognition memory: Implications for information processing.Developmental Psychology, 1982