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OverviewIn order for infants to make sense of the world they have to perceive it, and research into the development of sensory and perceptual abilities is an important area of infancy research. The aim of this book is both to reflect late-1990s knowledge of perceptual development and to point to some of the many questions that remain unanswered. The study of perceptual development is a sophisticated science. The majority of the chapters tell a detective story: the way in which infants perceive and understand the world as they develop. Each of the major sections is prefaced by introductory comments, and the book should be useful for advanced undergraduates, postgraduates, researchers, and other professionals who have an interest in early perceptual development and in infancy in general. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alan SlaterPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Psychology Press Ltd Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.885kg ISBN: 9780863778506ISBN 10: 086377850 Pages: 448 Publication Date: 07 October 1998 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsPart I. How the Visual System Develops: Normal and Abnormal Development. 1. The Development of Basic Visual Abilities. L. Hainline, A Context for Assessing Infant Vision. The Need for Assessment of Infant Vision. Development of Visual Structures. Development of Spatial Vision. Development of Color Vision. Development of Accommodation and Vergence. Development of Sensory Binocularity. Oculomotor Development. 2. Abnormal Visual Development. M.J. Moseley, M. Neufeld, A.R. Fielder, Visual Development: Effect of Abnormal Influences. Principles of Abnormal Visual Development: Amblyopia. Pediatric Opthalmic Disorders. Part II. Visual Development: From Sensation to Perception. Introduction. 3. Nativism and Empiricism: The History of Two Ideas. I. Gordon, A. Slater, The Historical Background to Empiricism. The Historical Background to Nativism. The Adoption of Empiricism and Nativism by Early Psychologists and Physiologists: Helmholtz and Hering. Some Landmarks in the Development of Empiricism and Nativism. Nativism: The Gestalt Theory, Ethology and Gibson's Concept of the Affordance. The Search for Compromises Between Nativism and Empiricism. Methods of Enquiry: The Ways in Which Researchers have Attempted to Decide Between the Two Traditions. 4. The Competent Infant: Innate Organisation and Early Learning in Infant Visual Perception. A. Slater, Preparedness for Visual Perception. Visual Organisation Soon After Birth. Innate Representations and Early Learning: The Case of Face Perception. Visual Organisation in the Early Months. The Roles of Experience and Learning. 5. Object and Spatial Categorisation in Young Infants: ""What"" and ""Where"" in Early Visual Perception. P.C. Quinn, Introduction: The importance of Perceptual Categorisation. Methedology. Perceptually Based Categorical Representations for Objects. Categorical Representations for Spatial Relations. Global Influences on the Development of Object and Spatial Categorisation. 6. The Development of Infant Causal Perception. L.B. Cohen, G. Amsel, M.A. Redford, M. Casasola, A Working Definintion of Causality. Historical Views and Distinctions. Evidence from Occluded Events. Evidence from Visible Events. Evidence from Younger Infants. Evidence from Older Infants. Evidence on the Agent-Patient Distinction. Meeting Fodor's Conditions. Extensions to Language. 7. Object Perception and Object Knowledge in Young Infants: A View from Studies of Visual Development. S.P. Johnson, Introduction: Object Perception and Object Knowledge in Everyday Life. The Development of Object Knowledge: Piaget's Theory. Visual Skills in the Neonate: The Foundations of Object Perception and Object Knowledge. Object Perception and Object Knowledge in the Neonate. Object Perception and Oject Knowledge in teh 2- to 3-Month Old. Object Perception and Object Knowledge in the 4- to 6- Month Old. Object Perception and Object Knowledge in the 7- to 12-Month Old. Caveats: The Problems of Replicability and Disagreement Between Studies. Theoretical Accounts of the Development of Object Knowledge. Part III. Perception of Social Stimuli. 8. Infant Social Perception. D.W. Muir, J. Nadel, Newborn Social Perception. Social Awakening Between 1 and 2 Months of Age. Social Discrimination: Social Signals Driving Affect and Attention of 3- to 6-Month Olds. The Onset of the Triadic System. Discrimination and Categorisation of Facial Expression of Emotion During Infancy. M. de Haan, C.A. Nelson, Discrimination of Facial Expressions. Categorisation of Facial Expressions. How are Expressions Encoded? Part IV. Perception of Speech. 10. Foetal Responses to Auditory and Speech Stimuli. J-P. Lecanuet, Potential Sources of Stimulation in the Foetal Milieu. Ouogeney of the Auditory System. Evidence of Foetal Auditory Functioning. Responses to Previously Encountered Stimulation: Foetal Learning. 11. Speech Perception During the First Year. P.W. JusczReviewsThis edited collection is just what was needed, both for the advanced student and for the mature researcher. The authors are leading researchers in their fields, and together they present a rich source of authoritative and up-to-date information on infant perception which will be enormously useful both to those entering the field of infancy as researchers, and to those who already work in the field but wish to bring themselves up-to-date on research topics outside their speciality. I learned a lot reading through the manuscript, and I look forward to having my own copy of the book: it will certainly be on my essential reading list. -Gavin BremnerUniversity of Lancaster. In just over thirty years of study, infancy research has moved out of its own infancy and into the maturity of a sophisticated psychological science with scientists attacking scientific questions from the philosophical to the methodological to the descriptive to the explanatory. This book is one tribute to developmental psychology in general, and a special tribute to progress which has been made in a special field, infant perception. -Marc Bornstein. This edited collection is just what was needed, both for the advanced student and for the mature researcher. The authors are leading researchers in their fields, and together they present a rich source of authoritative and up-to-date information on infant perception which will be enormously useful both to those entering the field of infancy as researchers, and to those who already work in the field but wish to bring themselves up-to-date on research topics outside their speciality. I learned a lot reading through the manuscript, and I look forward to having my own copy of the book: it will certainly be on my essential reading list. <br>-Gavin Bremner<br>University of Lancaster. <br> In just over thirty years of study, infancy research has moved out of its own infancy and into the maturity of a sophisticated psychological science with scientists attacking scientific questions from the philosophical to the methodological to the descriptive to the explanatory. This book is one tribute to developmental psychology in general, and a special tribute to progress which has been made in a special field, infant perception. <br>-Marc Bornstein. <br> Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |