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| Jan. 14, 2000 |
Press Contact: William Harms (773) 702-8356 w-harms@uchicago.edu |
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Babies understand complex actions by 12 months, University of Chicago researchers findYear-old infants have the ability to understand the intentions of relatively complicated actions performed by adults around them, University of Chicago researchers have discovered. This is the first evidence that infants make inferences about a persons underlying intentions based on observing him or her complete a series of actions. In particular, we found that 12-month-olds understand that the meaning of a particular behavior depends on the other behaviors of the person, said Amanda Woodward, Assistant Professor in Psychology at the University of Chicago and co-author of the article Twelve-Month-Old Infants Interpret Action in Context, which has been published in the current issue of the journal Psychological Science. Prior to this work, scholars had not known how early this ability develops. Adults understand that the significance of a particular action depends on the context in which it occurs. For example, a parent might pick up a bottle in order to take it away, or they might pick up the bottle in order to fill it with juice and return it to the baby. Woodwards research demonstrates that 12-month-old infants, like adults, interpret a particular action differently depending on the other actions the person performs. This new finding comes a year after Woodward published findings indicating that younger babies can understand isolated actions, for example, grasping an object, as being intentional. Now researchers know that by the time babies are one year old they begin to complete their thought processes and make the additional steps necessary for to comprehending that people not only mean to grasp an object when they reach for it, they also intend to of complete a different action. Learning to reason as an adult is a complicated skill, Woodward said. What we are doing is taking the skill apart and learning at which points different parts of adult reasoning begin. The current finding is important because it points to a source of rapid learning in children, who typically begin to talk, walk and imitate adult actions with growing skill between ages one and two. One of the most critical developmental achievements is coming to understand the intentions behind other people's actions. This ability is the basis for many kinds of learning in toddlers and young children, for example, acquiring language, learning socially appropriate behaviors, and learning how to use objects as diverse as containers, door knobs and VCRs, Woodward explained. Our research shows that children dont necessarily need to be explicitly taught how to do these things. They can make inferences about the significance of an action just by observing other people, Woodward added. The ability to link actions that occur together provides infants with a powerful tool for making sense of human behavior, she writes in the paper co-authored by Jessica Sommerville, a University of Chicago graduate student. For the experiment, the researchers began by showing babies an ambiguous event: an experimenter reached toward and touched the lid of a clear, plastic box containing a small toy. Babies were not sure whether the experimenters intention was to touch the box or to obtain the toy within in the box. Next, the researchers showed babies this ambiguous action, followed by another actionthe experimenter opened the box and grasped the toy. Having observed the sequence, when babies again saw the ambiguous action on its own, they now understood it to be directed at the toy, not the box. That is, the infants inferred the intention behind this ambiguous action based on the other actions the experimenter had performed. To measure infants reasoning skills, Woodward and Sommerville studied infants patterns of visual attention. This method is very useful with infants who cannot yet talk. When infants see the same event again and again, they look at it less and less. Then, if there is a change in the event and infants notice it, they will look longer. In the experiments, babies first saw an actor touch one box containing a particular toy. When they were bored with the event, the actor touched a new box that contained the same toy, or she touched the same box, which now contained a new toy. The babies looked longer when there was a change in the toy rather than when there was a change in the box. This suggests they understood the action as directed at the toy and not the box. All together, 60 12-month infants participated in the experiment. Woodward is among a group of researchers with the Universitys Early Childhood Initiative, a program funded by the Robert R. McCormick Tribune Foundation. Woodward and Somervilles work on infant ability to interpret actions was supported by the McCormick Tribune Foundation, the John Merck Fund and the National Institutes of Health. http://www-news.uchicago.edu/releases/00/000114.woodward.shtml Last modified at 03:50 PM CST on Wednesday, June 14, 2000. | |
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