Social Contingency Effects on Subsequent Perceptual-Cognitive Tasks in Young Infants

3 experiments with 3-month-old infants compared the effects of contingent and noncontingent adult-infant social interactions on subsequent infant-controlled habituation and choice tasks. Infants who experienced a prior noncontingent social interaction tended to adopt response strategies that reduced...

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Veröffentlicht in:Child development 1989-12, Vol.60 (6), p.1486-1496
Hauptverfasser: Dunham, Philip, Dunham, Frances, Hurshman, Alan, Alexander, Teresa
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:3 experiments with 3-month-old infants compared the effects of contingent and noncontingent adult-infant social interactions on subsequent infant-controlled habituation and choice tasks. Infants who experienced a prior noncontingent social interaction tended to adopt response strategies that reduced the density of stimulation during these subsequent nonsocial tasks. The results are discussed in terms of their generality and the types of mechanisms that might mediate these transfer effects from social to nonsocial procedures.
ISSN:0009-3920
1467-8624
DOI:10.2307/1130937