Infants Learn About Objects From Statistics and People

被引:102
|
作者
Wu, Rachel [1 ]
Gopnik, Alison [2 ,4 ]
Richardson, Daniel C. [3 ]
Kirkham, Natasha Z. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London, Birkbeck Coll, Ctr Brain & Cognit Dev, London WC1E 7HX, England
[2] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Psychol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[3] UCL, Dept Cognit Perceptual & Brain Sci, London, England
[4] Univ Calif Berkeley, Inst Human Dev, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
statistical learning; infancy; eye tracking; object perception; gaze following; PERCEPTION; ATTENTION; FAMILIARITY; SALIENCE; NOVELTY; WORDS;
D O I
10.1037/a0024023
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
In laboratory experiments, infants are sensitive to patterns of visual features that co-occur (e.g., Fiser & Aslin, 2002). Once infants learn the statistical regularities, however, what do they do with that knowledge? Moreover, which patterns do infants learn in the cluttered world outside of the laboratory? Across 4 experiments, we show that 9-month-olds use this sensitivity to make inferences about object properties. In Experiment 1, 9-month-old infants expected co-occurring visual features to remain fused (i.e., infants looked longer when co-occurring features split apart than when they stayed together). Forming such expectations can help identify integral object parts for object individuation, recognition, and categorization. In Experiment 2, we increased the task difficulty by presenting the test stimuli simultaneously with a different spatial layout from the familiarization trials to provide a more ecologically valid condition. Infants did not make similar inferences in this more distracting test condition. However. Experiment 3 showed that a social cue did allow inferences in this more difficult test condition, and Experiment 4 showed that social cues helped infants choose patterns among distractor patterns during learning as well as during test. These findings suggest that infants can use feature co-occurrence to learn about objects and that social cues shape such foundational learning in distraction-filled environments.
引用
收藏
页码:1220 / 1229
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Are infants in the dark about hidden objects?
    Shinskey, JL
    Munakata, Y
    DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2003, 6 (03) : 273 - 282
  • [12] Social Cues Support Learning about Objects from Statistics in Infancy
    Wu, Rachel
    Gopnik, Alison
    Richardson, Daniel C.
    Kirkham, Natasha Z.
    COGNITION IN FLUX, 2010, : 1228 - 1233
  • [13] How Infants Learn About the Visual World
    Johnson, Scott P.
    COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2010, 34 (07) : 1158 - 1184
  • [14] Learning about Objects in the Meeting Rooms from People Trajectories
    Xie, Xingzhe
    Gruenwedel, Sebastian
    Jelaca, Vedran
    Castaneda, Jorge Oswaldo Nino
    Van Haerenborgh, Dirk
    Van Cauwelaert, Dimitri
    Van Hese, Peter
    Veelaert, Peter
    Philips, Wilfried
    Aghajan, Hamid
    2012 SIXTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON DISTRIBUTED SMART CAMERAS (ICDSC), 2012,
  • [15] Young infants' expectations about hidden objects
    Ruffman, T
    Slade, L
    Redman, J
    COGNITION, 2005, 97 (02) : B35 - B43
  • [16] Infants recruit logic to learn about the social world
    Nicolò Cesana-Arlotti
    Ágnes Melinda Kovács
    Ernő Téglás
    Nature Communications, 11
  • [17] Infants recruit logic to learn about the social world
    Cesana-Arlotti, Nicolo
    Kovacs, Agnes Melinda
    Teglas, Erno
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2020, 11 (01)
  • [18] HOW DO INFANTS LEARN ABOUT THE PHYSICAL WORLD
    BAILLARGEON, R
    CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 1994, 3 (05) : 133 - 140
  • [19] What People Learn About Drinking Water Disruptions From Local Newspapers
    Otero, Catherine E.
    Bell, Emily V.
    Das, Sarwari
    Mullin, Megan
    JOURNAL AWWA, 2023, 115 (05): : 58 - 66
  • [20] What people learn about how people learn: An analysis of citation behavior and the multidisciplinary flow of knowledge
    Solomon, Gregg E. A.
    Youtie, Jan
    Carley, Stephen
    Porter, Alan L.
    RESEARCH POLICY, 2019, 48 (09)