Origins and early development of human body knowledge
著者
書誌事項
Origins and early development of human body knowledge
(Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, serial no. 276 = v. 69,
Blackwell, 2004
- タイトル別名
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Infants' body knowledge
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 94-101)
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This Monograph examines the development of infants' and toddlers' knowledge about human bodies. The concept of the human body is highly complex and operates on several levels of knowing. We move our bodies and recognize similar movements in the bodies of others, we have expectations about how bodies are typically built, and we have detailed knowledge about internal and external parts of the body and their functions. In the work presented here, the authors explore how these aspects of body knowledge originate in the first few years of life, and report a series of studies that documents the development of infants' and toddlers' knowledge about the structure of the human body. Results from the studies indicate that infants' knowledge about the structure of the human body is initially highly schematic, becoming more detailed and specific in the second year of life.
目次
Abstract.Levels of Human Body Knowledge in Development.Visual Habituation Studies: Infants' Response to Typical and Scrambled Body Pictures.Object Exploration Studies: Infants' Discrimination of Typical and Scrambled Dolls.Discussion.References.Acknowledgements..Commentary.Facing the Body: Toward a Developmental Theory of Body Knowledge (Ulrich Muller and Dana Liebermann).Contributors.Statement of Editorial Policy.
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