Reactivation of Infant Memory
- 6 June 1980
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 208 (4448) , 1159-1161
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.7375924
Abstract
Three-month-old infants learned to activate a crib mobile by means of operant footkicks. Retention of the conditioned response was assessed during a cued recall test with the nonmoving mobile. Although forgetting is typically complete after an 8-day retention interval, infants who received a reactivation treatment--a brief exposure to the reinforcer 24 hours before retention testing--showed no forgetting after retention intervals of either 2 or 4 weeks. Further, the forgetting function after a reactivation treatment did not differ from the original forgetting function. These experiments demonstrate that (i) "reactivation" or "reinstatement" is an effective mechanism by which early experiences can continue to influence behavior over lengthy intervals and (ii) memory deficits in young infants are best viewed as retrieval deficits.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Retrograde Amnesia for Old (Reactivated) Memory: Some Anomalous CharacteristicsScience, 1979
- A Conditioning Analysis of Infant Long-Term MemoryChild Development, 1979
- The Economics of Infancy: A Review of Conjugate ReinforcementAdvances in Child Development and Behavior, 1979
- The onset of representation and entry into Stage 6 of object permanence development.Developmental Psychology, 1978
- Extended conditioning and 24-hour retention in infantsJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1976
- Retrieval of memory in animals.Psychological Review, 1973
- Reinstatement effects in children.Developmental Psychology, 1972
- Reinstatement.Psychological Review, 1966
- Effects of early experience upon the behavior of animals.Psychological Bulletin, 1954
- On Memory and Childhood AmnesiaPsychiatry: Interpersonal & Biological Processes, 1947