Moore M Keith, Meltzoff Andrew N
Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences, Box 357920, University of Washington, Seattle WA 98195, United States.
Infant Behav Dev. 2008 Apr;31(2):168-80. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2007.10.006. Epub 2007 Nov 26.
Two experiments systematically examined factors that influence infants' manual search for hidden objects (N=96). Experiment 1 used a new procedure to assess infants' search for partially versus totally occluded objects. Results showed that 8.75-month-old infants solved partial occlusions by removing the occluder and uncovering the object, but these same infants failed to use this skill on total occlusions. Experiment 2 used sound-producing objects to provide a perceptual clue to the objects' hidden location. Sound clues significantly increased the success rate on total occlusions for 10-month-olds, but not for 8.75-month-olds. An identity development account is offered for why infants succeed on partial occlusions earlier than total occlusions and why sound helps only the older infants. We propose a mechanism for how infants use object identity as a basis for developing a notion of permanence. Implications are drawn for understanding the dissociation between looking time and search assessments of object permanence.
两项实验系统地研究了影响婴儿手动寻找隐藏物体的因素(N = 96)。实验1采用了一种新程序来评估婴儿对部分遮挡与完全遮挡物体的寻找。结果显示,8.75个月大的婴儿通过移除遮挡物并露出物体来解决部分遮挡问题,但同样这些婴儿在面对完全遮挡时却未能运用此技能。实验2使用能发声的物体为物体的隐藏位置提供感知线索。声音线索显著提高了10个月大婴儿在完全遮挡情况下的成功率,但对8.75个月大的婴儿却没有效果。本文给出了一个关于婴儿身份发展的解释,来说明为什么婴儿在部分遮挡任务上比完全遮挡任务上更早取得成功,以及为什么声音线索只对年龄较大的婴儿有帮助。我们提出了一种机制,用以解释婴儿如何将物体身份作为发展恒常性概念的基础。这对于理解物体恒常性的注视时间和寻找评估之间的分离具有启示意义。