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Neoconstructivism: The New Science of Cognitive Development [Hardback]

(Professor of Developmental Psychology, University of California-Los Angeles)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 384 pages, height x width x depth: 175x257x25 mm, weight: 1120 g, 50 halftones, 100 line illus.
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jan-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195331052
  • ISBN-13: 9780195331059
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 100,23 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 384 pages, height x width x depth: 175x257x25 mm, weight: 1120 g, 50 halftones, 100 line illus.
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jan-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195331052
  • ISBN-13: 9780195331059
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Arguments over the developmental origins of human knowledge are ancient, founded in the writings of Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Hume, and Kant. They have also persisted long enough to become a core area of inquiry in cognitive and developmental science. Empirical contributions to these debates, however, appeared only in the last century, when Jean Piaget offered the first viable theory of knowledge acquisition that centered on the great themes discussed by Kant: object, space, time, and causality. The essence of Piaget's theory is constructivism: The building of concepts from simpler perceptual and cognitive precursors, in particular from experience gained through manual behaviors and observation.

The constructivist view was disputed by a generation of researchers dedicated to the idea of the "competent infant," endowed with knowledge (say, of permanent objects) that emerged prior to facile manual behaviors. Taking this possibility further, it has been proposed that many fundamental cognitive mechanisms -- reasoning, event prediction, decision-making, hypothesis testing, and deduction -- operate independently of all experience, and are, in this sense, innate. The competent-infant view has an intuitive appeal, attested to by its widespread popularity, and it enjoys a kind of parsimony: It avoids the supposed philosophical pitfall posed by having to account for novel forms of knowledge in inductive learners. But this view leaves unaddressed a vital challenge: to understand the mechanisms by which new knowledge arises.

This challenge has now been met. The neoconstructivist approach is rooted in Piaget's constructivist emphasis on developmental mechanisms, yet also reflects modern advances in our understanding of learning mechanisms, cortical development, and modeling. This book brings together, for the first time, theoretical views that embrace computational models and developmental neurobiology, and emphasize the interplay of time, experience, and cortical architecture to explain emergent knowledge, with an empirical line of research identifying a set of general-purpose sensory, perceptual, and learning mechanisms that guide knowledge acquisition across different domains and through development.
Contributors xi
Introduction xiii
Scott P. Johnson
I. Objects and Space
Attention in the Brain and Early Infancy
3(29)
John E. Richards
All Together Now: Learning through Multiple Sources
32(13)
Natasha Kirkham
Perceptual Completion in Infancy
45(16)
Scott P. Johnson
Numerical Identity and the Development of Object Permanence
61(26)
M. Keith Moore
Andrew N. Meltzoff
II. Words, Language, and Music
Connectionist Explorations of Multiple-Cue Integration in Syntax Acquisition
87(22)
Morten H. Christiansen
Rick Dale
Florencia Reali
Shape, Action, Symbolic Play, and Words: Overlapping Loops of Cause and Consequence in Developmental Process
109(23)
Linda B. Smith
Alfredo F. Pereira
Musical Enculturation: How Young Listeners Construct Musical Knowledge through Perceptual Experience
132(27)
Erin E. Hannon
III. Learning Mechanisms
Integrating Top-down and Bottom-up Approaches to Children's Causal Inference
159(21)
David M. Sobel
What Is Statistical Learning, and What Statistical Learning Is Not
180(15)
Jenny R. Saffran
Processing Constraints on Learning
195(18)
Rebecca Gomez
Mixing the Old with the New and the New with the Old: Combining Prior and Current Knowledge in Conceptual Change
213(20)
Denis Mareschal
Gert Westermann
IV. Induction
Development of Inductive Inference in Infancy
233(19)
David H. Rakison
Jessica B. Cicchino
The Acquisition of Expertise as a Model for the Growth of Cognitive Structure
252(22)
Paul C. Quinn
Similarity, Induction, Naming, and Categorization: A Bottom-up Approach
274(21)
Vladimir M. Sloutsky
V. Foundations of Social Cognition
Building Intentional Action Knowledge with One's Hands
295(19)
Sarah Gerson
Amanda Woodward
A Neoconstructivistic Approach to the Emergence of a Face Processing System
314(21)
Francesca Simion
Irene Leo
VI. The Big Picture
A Bottom-up Approach to Infant Perception and Cognition: A Summary of Evidence and Discussion of Issues
335(12)
Leslie B. Cohen
Author Index 347(14)
Subject Index 361
Professor of Developmental Psychology, University of California at Los Angeles