The Effects of Graded Occlusion on Manual Search and Visual Attention in 5‐ to 8‐Month‐Old Infants
- 1 July 2000
- Vol. 1 (3) , 323-346
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327078in0103_3
Abstract
Young infants may be limited in searching for hidden objects because they lack the means-end motor skill to lift occluders from objects. This account was investigated by presenting 5- to 8-month-old infants with objects hidden behind transparent, semitransparent, and opaque curtains. If a means-end deficit explains search limitations, then infants should search no more for an object behind a transparent curtain than for objects behind semitransparent or opaque curtains. However, level of occlusion had a significant effect on manual search and visual attention. Infants retrieved and contacted the object more, contacted the curtain more, and looked away less with the transparent curtain than with the semi transparent or opaque curtains. Adding a time delay before allowing search and presenting a distraction after occlusion further depressed infants' behavior. The findings fail to support the means-end deficit hypothesis, but are consistent with the account that young infants lack object permanence.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perseverative reaching in infancy: The roles of hidden toys and motor history in the AB taskInfant Behavior and Development, 1997
- Why do young infants fail to search for hidden objects?Cognition, 1990
- Adjustment of means-ends coordination and the representation of spatial relations in the production of search errors by infantsBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1985
- Will infants search when ‘no toy’ is hidden? A study of implicit assumptions about the development of object permanenceBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1984
- Stages in the development of intentional search by young infants.Developmental Psychology, 1984
- Perception of visual occlusion in 4 1/2-month-old infantsInfant Behavior and Development, 1982
- An Alternative Explanation of the Infant's Difficulty in the Stage III, IV, and V Object-Concept TasksPerception, 1982
- Do 5-month-olds show object conception in piaget's sense?Infant Behavior and Development, 1980
- Cognition and perception in the object concept.Canadian Journal of Psychology / Revue canadienne de psychologie, 1979
- Stage IV of Piaget's Theory of Infant's Object Concepts: A Longitudinal StudyChild Development, 1971