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Experience matters: The impact of doing versus watching on infants' subsequent perception of tool-use events.
Authors:Sommerville  Jessica A; Hildebrand  Elina A; Crane  Catharyn C
Abstract:Prior work suggests that active experience affects infants' understanding of simple actions. The present studies compared the impact of active and observational experience on infants' ability to identify the goal of a novel tool-use event. Infants either received active training and practice in using a cane to retrieve an out-of-reach toy or had matched observational experience before taking part in a habituation paradigm that we used to assess infants' ability to identify the goal of another person's tool-use acts. Active training alone facilitated 10-month-old infants' ability to identify the goal of the tool-use event. Active experience using tools may enable infants to build motor representations of tool-use events that subsequently guide action perception and support action understanding. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:action perception  tool use  goals  agency  active & observational experience  goal identification  motor representations  action understanding
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