Young babies' views of the world are far more basic than many believe. A new
three-year research project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council
suggests that babies are not born with as much innate knowledge of the world as
some current studies suggest.
"A great deal is claimed about what young babies know about the world but our
findings favour a much more cautious approach," states researcher Professor
Gavin Bremner of the University of Lancaster. His research is published today as
part of Social Science week.
The study investigated the way in which babies up to six months old perceive
objects. "As adults, we perceive a world composed of coherent, segregated
objects," explains Professor Bremner. "Also, as objects move we perceive them
persisting even if they are temporarily hidden by other objects." These
abilities to fill in the gaps in perceptual experience are fundamental to human
perception, but are we born with these abilities or do they develop in infancy?
Moreover, do babies perceive the world in this way, or is their perception
limited very much to what is literally visible at any one moment?
Researchers addressed these questions by testing how young infants perceive
an object which moves from left to right but passes behind a screen at the half
way point. Do the babies perceive it as a single object moving continuously, or
do they see it as two separate movement segments?
"We carried out a series of studies to establish the conditions under which
young infants perceived such movement events as continuous," he explains. The
first finding is that the width of screen is important: four-month-olds perceive
trajectory continuity when the screen the object moves behind is narrow but not
when it is wide. There is also a developmental effect: two-month-olds do not
perceive trajectory continuity even when the screen is narrow, whereas a baby at
six months perceives continuity even when the screen is wide. Further
investigation reveals that four-month-olds perceive an object as moving
continuously only when it is out of sight for a short distance (ie a narrow
screen) or for a short period of time.
"These findings are important because they cast doubt on nativist claims that
babies are born with some sort of innate pre-wiring that means awareness of
objects is well developed at birth," Professor Bremner points out. "In fact, our
results suggest a very different developmental process from that presented by
nativists," he adds. Rather than concluding that perception of the identity and
permanence of moving objects is present at birth, it seems apparent that babies
initially do not see objects that move behind a screen as moving on a continuous
path. And by four months they do so only under tightly constrained conditions.
"This suggests that babies develop their perceptual abilities with age but are
not born with them," he concludes.
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For further information, contact:
Professor Gavin Bremner on 152-459-3821 or 44-786-683-9160 (mobile) or
e-mail: j.g.bremner@lancaster.ac.uk
Or Lesley Lilley or Anna Hinds at ESRC, on 01793-413119/122
NOTES FOR EDITORS
1. Social Science Week 2003, from the 23rd to the 27th June, is about
revitalising policy by bringing social scientists and their research together
with policy-makers.. Events in various locations will showcase a broad array of
ESRC research. Topics will cover a wide spectrum, from the state of UK business
to climate change and arms control. For a programme visit
www.esrc.ac.uk/socialscienceweek or call David Ridley, External Relations,
on 01793 413118.
2. The research report 'Perception of object trajectories by young infants'
was based on a three-year project funded by the Economic and Social Research
Council (ESRC). Gavin Bremner is Professor of Developmental Psychology,
Department of Psychology, University of Lancaster, LA1 4YF.
3. The ESRC is the UK's largest funding agency for research and postgraduate
training relating to social and economic issues. It has a track record of
providing high-quality, relevant research to business, the public sector and
Government. The ESRC invests more than £53 million every year in social science
research. At any time, its range of funding schemes may be supporting 2,000
researchers within academic institutions and research policy institutes. It also
funds postgraduate training within the social sciences thereby nurturing the
researchers of tomorrow. The ESRC website address is
http://www.esrc.ac.uk
4. REGARD is the ESRC's database of research. It provides a key source of
information on ESRC social science research awards and all associated
publications and products. The website can be found at
http://www.regard.ac.uk.
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