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Postural change effects on infants' AB task performance: visual, postural or spatial?

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Postural change effects on infants' AB task performance: visual, postural or spatial? / Lew, Adina; Hopkins, Brian; Owen, Laura et al.
In: Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, Vol. 97, No. 1, 2007, p. 1-13.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Lew A, Hopkins B, Owen L, Green M. Postural change effects on infants' AB task performance: visual, postural or spatial? Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 2007;97(1):1-13. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2006.12.009

Author

Lew, Adina ; Hopkins, Brian ; Owen, Laura et al. / Postural change effects on infants' AB task performance : visual, postural or spatial?. In: Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 2007 ; Vol. 97, No. 1. pp. 1-13.

Bibtex

@article{af59b1bd833e4079ab2239a608741f81,
title = "Postural change effects on infants' AB task performance: visual, postural or spatial?",
abstract = "Smith and colleagues (Smith, L. B., Thelen, E., Titzer, R., & McLin, D. (1999). Knowing in the context of acting: The task dynamics of the A-not-B error. Psychological Review, 106, 235–260) demonstrated that 10-month-olds succeed on a Piagetian AB search task if they are moved from a sitting position to a standing position between A and B trials. These authors explained this result by suggesting that because the reach must be executed by different muscle forces from the standing position, an appropriate reach to B is programmed without the memory of the previous reach interfering with the current reach. In the main study reported here, the influences of postural and spatial factors are separated by adding a condition in which the table containing the hiding wells is moved up at the same time as the infant is shifted to standing, thereby allowing a postural change without a change in the spatial relations between the hand and hiding locations. Results showed that in both a standard control condition and the sitting-to-standing condition in which the table also moved up, performance was poor. Only in the sitting-to-standing condition in which the spatial relation between the hand and apparatus was altered were infants successful. These outcomes demonstrate that perseveration effects are likely to occur at the level of reach planning rather than at the level of execution, thereby narrowing the gap between explanations of improvements in AB performance with age that emphasize prefrontal maturation as opposed to improvements in reaching ability.",
keywords = "Infant cognition, A-not-B error, Object permanence",
author = "Adina Lew and Brian Hopkins and Laura Owen and Michael Green",
note = "Lew senior author, designed study, analysed data, wrote manuscript. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Psychology",
year = "2007",
doi = "10.1016/j.jecp.2006.12.009",
language = "English",
volume = "97",
pages = "1--13",
journal = "Journal of Experimental Child Psychology",
issn = "0022-0965",
publisher = "ELSEVIER ACADEMIC PRESS INC",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Postural change effects on infants' AB task performance

T2 - visual, postural or spatial?

AU - Lew, Adina

AU - Hopkins, Brian

AU - Owen, Laura

AU - Green, Michael

N1 - Lew senior author, designed study, analysed data, wrote manuscript. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Psychology

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Smith and colleagues (Smith, L. B., Thelen, E., Titzer, R., & McLin, D. (1999). Knowing in the context of acting: The task dynamics of the A-not-B error. Psychological Review, 106, 235–260) demonstrated that 10-month-olds succeed on a Piagetian AB search task if they are moved from a sitting position to a standing position between A and B trials. These authors explained this result by suggesting that because the reach must be executed by different muscle forces from the standing position, an appropriate reach to B is programmed without the memory of the previous reach interfering with the current reach. In the main study reported here, the influences of postural and spatial factors are separated by adding a condition in which the table containing the hiding wells is moved up at the same time as the infant is shifted to standing, thereby allowing a postural change without a change in the spatial relations between the hand and hiding locations. Results showed that in both a standard control condition and the sitting-to-standing condition in which the table also moved up, performance was poor. Only in the sitting-to-standing condition in which the spatial relation between the hand and apparatus was altered were infants successful. These outcomes demonstrate that perseveration effects are likely to occur at the level of reach planning rather than at the level of execution, thereby narrowing the gap between explanations of improvements in AB performance with age that emphasize prefrontal maturation as opposed to improvements in reaching ability.

AB - Smith and colleagues (Smith, L. B., Thelen, E., Titzer, R., & McLin, D. (1999). Knowing in the context of acting: The task dynamics of the A-not-B error. Psychological Review, 106, 235–260) demonstrated that 10-month-olds succeed on a Piagetian AB search task if they are moved from a sitting position to a standing position between A and B trials. These authors explained this result by suggesting that because the reach must be executed by different muscle forces from the standing position, an appropriate reach to B is programmed without the memory of the previous reach interfering with the current reach. In the main study reported here, the influences of postural and spatial factors are separated by adding a condition in which the table containing the hiding wells is moved up at the same time as the infant is shifted to standing, thereby allowing a postural change without a change in the spatial relations between the hand and hiding locations. Results showed that in both a standard control condition and the sitting-to-standing condition in which the table also moved up, performance was poor. Only in the sitting-to-standing condition in which the spatial relation between the hand and apparatus was altered were infants successful. These outcomes demonstrate that perseveration effects are likely to occur at the level of reach planning rather than at the level of execution, thereby narrowing the gap between explanations of improvements in AB performance with age that emphasize prefrontal maturation as opposed to improvements in reaching ability.

KW - Infant cognition

KW - A-not-B error

KW - Object permanence

U2 - 10.1016/j.jecp.2006.12.009

DO - 10.1016/j.jecp.2006.12.009

M3 - Journal article

VL - 97

SP - 1

EP - 13

JO - Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

JF - Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

SN - 0022-0965

IS - 1

ER -