The Child's representation of the world : [proceedings of the annual conference of the Developmental Section of the British Psychological Society held at the University of Surrey, England, September 14-16, 1976]

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The Child's representation of the world : [proceedings of the annual conference of the Developmental Section of the British Psychological Society held at the University of Surrey, England, September 14-16, 1976]

edited by George Butterworth

Plenum Press, c1977

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 19

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注記

Includes bibliographies and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Although central to theories of cognitive development, the concept of representation remains subtle and elusive. This collection of papers reflects a variety of individual emphases, none of which are mutually exclusive. The papers have been arranged in four groups, mainly along lines of related subject matter but also to illustrate different aspects of the development of representation. In Piaget's theory, representation is defined as "the making present of an object which is not present to the senses" (Furth 1969). Representation has both a figurative and an operative aspect. The organisation of the content of the representation (the figurative aspect) depends on the operations of thought or on the schemes co-ordinating action. This use of the term is applic- able both to internal representations, such as visual images and to external representation, such as children's drawings. However, it presupposes no necessary relation between a mental image and a graphic representation. The first part of the book consists of papers on children's drawing. The operative aspect of representation emerges in the serial ordering problems encountered by young children who produce "tadpole" figures (Freeman Chapter 1). The figurative aspect of graphic representation is vividly illustrated by the drawings of the autistic child Nadia (Selfe Chapter 2). One further issue which emerges concerns the relation between linguistic and graphic representation.

目次

I Children's Drawing.- 1. How Young Children Try to Plan Drawings.- 2. A Single Case Study of an Autistic Child with Exceptional Drawing Ability.- With an Introduction and Postscript by Elizabeth Newson.- Discussion of Papers by Freeman and Selfe.- 3. Production Strategies in the Child's Drawing of the Human Figure: Towards an Argument for a Model of Syncretic Perception.- 4. A Discussion of Some Sex Differences in a Study of Human Figure Drawings by Children Aged Four-and-a-half to Seven-and-a-half Years.- Discussion of Paper by Willsdon.- 5. Naming of Parts: How Children Describe and How Children Draw Common Objects.- II The Child's Perception and Representation of Space.- 6. The Child's Representation of Space.- 7. Training Perspective Ability in Young Children.- Discussion of the Paper by Cox.- 8. Scanning Strategies of Children and Adults.- 9. Spatial Representation by Blind and Sighted Children.- 10. "I'm coming to get you: Ready! Steady! Go!" The Development of Communication Between a Blind Infant and His Parents.- III Personality and Representational Style.- 11. Rational and Intuitive Frames of Reference.- IV Philosophical and Cross-cultural Aspects of Representation.- 12. Representation: The Philosophical Contribution to Psychology.- 13. How Children Learn to Represent Three-dimensional Space in Drawings.- 14. Pictorial Recognition as an Unlearned Ability.- Discussion of the Papers by Wollheim and Jahoda.- 15. Pictures, Symbols and Frames of Reference.

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