Department of Applied Psychology, New York University, New York, New York, USA.
Infancy. 2023 May;28(3):468-491. doi: 10.1111/infa.12538. Epub 2023 Mar 24.
Development is complex. It encompasses interacting domains, at multiple levels, across nested time scales. Embracing the complexity of development-while addressing the challenges inherent to studying infants-requires researchers to make tough decisions about what to study, why, how, where, and when. My own view is inspired by a developmental systems approach, and echoed in Esther Thelen's (2005) mountain stream metaphor. Like a river that carves its course, the active infant navigates the social and physical environment and generates rich inputs that propel learning and development. Drawing from my experiences, I offer some recommendations to guide research on infants. I encourage researchers to embrace discovery science; to observe infants in ecologically valid settings; to recognize the active and adaptive nature of infant behavior; to break down silos and consider the nonobvious; and to adopt full transparency in all aspects of research. I draw on cascading influences in infant play, language, and motor domains to illustrate the value of a bottom-up, cross-domain, collaborative approach.
发展是复杂的。它包含了多个层面、嵌套时间尺度上相互作用的领域。在研究婴儿时,既要应对固有挑战,又要包容发展的复杂性,这就要求研究人员在研究什么、为什么研究、如何研究、在哪里研究和何时研究等方面做出艰难的决策。我自己的观点受到发展系统方法的启发,并呼应了 Esther Thelen(2005)的山脉溪流隐喻。就像河流一样,活跃的婴儿在社会和物理环境中导航,并产生丰富的输入,推动学习和发展。根据我的经验,我提出了一些建议来指导对婴儿的研究。我鼓励研究人员接受发现科学;在生态有效的环境中观察婴儿;认识到婴儿行为的主动性和适应性;打破隔阂,考虑不明显的因素;并在研究的各个方面都采用完全透明。我借鉴了婴儿游戏、语言和运动领域的级联影响,来说明自下而上、跨领域、协作方法的价值。