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Developmental Psychology
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JoVE 科学教育 Developmental Psychology
Habituation: Studying Infants Before They Can Talk
  • 00:00概述
  • 01:13Experimental Design
  • 03:03Running the Experiment
  • 04:59Representative Results
  • 05:46Applications
  • 07:00Summary

彼らは話すことができる前に、馴化: 勉強幼児

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概述

ソース: カーラ Cashon、ジュディス ・ Danovitch ・ ニクラス Noles 研究所-ルイビル大学

幼児は、彼らは非常にいくつかの人生経験があったから、人間の思考と学習についての最も純粋な源の一つです。したがって、乳児からのデータ収集に興味がある研究者が実験研究の参加者として、勉強する挑戦的なグループ。古い子供および大人とは異なりは、乳児は確実に話す、話す言葉を理解するかも移動して、自分の体を制御することができます。食べて、寝て、周りを見ては、赤ちゃんを確実に実行することができますのみの活動です。これらの制限を考えると、研究者は幼児の考えを探索するためのテクニックを開発しました。最も人気のある方法のいずれか慣れと呼ばれる注意の特性を利用します。

大人のような幼児は新たな、興味深いことに注意を払うことを好みます。彼らは、同じ環境で残っている場合時間をかけて彼らの環境に慣れていてそれらに以下の注意を払います。このプロセスは、慣れと呼ばれます。ただし、新しい何かの瞬間に発生、幼児は、待っていると再び注意を支払う準備ができてです。慣れ注目のこの和らげを馴化と呼びます。科学者は、考え方を勉強し、若い幼児の学習のツールとして注目のこれらの特性の変更を使用できます。この方法は、当初彼らが慣れているまで乳児に刺激を提示し、変化に気づく彼ら dishabituate、すなわちかどうかを参照してくださいに刺激の異なる種類の提示を含みます。幼児に示すように刺激を慎重に選択、によって研究者はどのように幼児の考え、学ぶことについて多大な学ぶことができます。

この実験は、慣れを使用して幼形の差別を勉強する方法を示します。

Procedure

6 ヵ月の乳児の数を採用します。参加者が健康、発達障害の歴史を持たず、通常の聴覚と視覚があります。この年齢の幼児が協調することができますのでうるさい (例えばデモを見たり、テスト中に眠りに落ちることを拒否する)、または慣れ基準を満たす必要があります、余分な参加者が十分なデータを得るために募集する必要があります。 1. データの収集 慣れの段階 静かな部屋に大型モニターの前に椅子を置きます。 親が自分の赤ちゃんを保持し、ままに指示画面の中心のすぐ上のポイントを見ながらできるだけ静か。 幼児の認知に関する多くの研究を必要とする目隠しされたり、ノイズ キャンセルが装備する親意識的または無意識のうちに彼らの幼児に影響彼らはありませんを確認するためにヘッドフォンの動作を見るします。ただし、親の摩耗を持つ目隠しやヘッドフォンだけでできます赤ちゃんに気が散る。したがって、一部の研究者は、単に自分の赤ちゃんに影響を与えるし、問題がなかったことを確認する事実の後ビデオを確認のためには親を指示します。 モニターの下にカメラを使用して別の部屋から幼児を観察します。このカメラは、幼児の顔に焦点を当てて、かどうか赤ちゃんは見ているモニターか、離れて乳児に示されている画像ではないことがわかります。実験を通して幼児を映画します。 慣れ試験刺激を提示します。 まず、注目の刺激は幼児が各試験前にモニターに注意を払っていることを確認するモニターに提示されます。 幼児は、モニターを見ては、青い円この場合、慣れに割り当てられた刺激を提示するキーを押します。 同時に時間を追跡するキーを押しながら各トライアルで乳児の注視時間を記録します。幼児は、モニターから離れて見える、キーを放します。赤ちゃんの注意をモニターに返します場合、は、画面にキーと刺激のまま、ボタンします。いつでも s 時間または裁判の最大の長さは、1.0 よりも多くのモニターから離れて赤ちゃんに見える場合 (20 s)、イメージが画面から見えなくなるし、人目を引く刺激を返します。毎回毎回実験の両方の段階でこの手順が繰り返されます。 乳幼児は一般的に慣れの最初のいくつかの試験、かなり後で試験の少ない中最長見て、乳児の視覚的注意は考慮されるべき十分に減った場合を決定する条件を設定するのにはこの段階では最初の 3 つの使用試験は慣れ。この場合、これは 3 つシーケンシャル慣れ試験時間を探しているその平均が 50% または観察慣れ試験を最初の 3 つの時間を探しているその平均より小さいときです。 幼児慣れの基準に達するまでは、研究のこのフェーズを続行します。慣れに到達するために必要な試行回数は、赤ちゃんによって異なります。 テスト フェーズ 幼児が慣れされて、一度テスト フェーズを開始します。このフェーズのみとは異なり慣れ相異なる刺激が表示されます。 青い円は、本件での慣れ刺激または新奇刺激幼児を表示 — 青い正方形。幼児がお探しの計測手順は変わりません。 両方の刺激が表示されますすべての赤ちゃん: テスト刺激の呈示順序を相殺するので、半分は慣れ刺激を参照してください最初に、一方、他の半分は最初に新奇刺激を参照してください。 次のテスト試験参加のため親と幼児を感謝することによってセッションは終了します。 2. 解析 ビデオ カメラの配置のための実験者が幼児に刺激の気づいていません。場合はない場合は、ビデオの録画をコード示されている刺激に目の不自由な 2 つの独立した評価があります。また、多くの近代的な研究所は、幼児が実験中にいつでも探している場所を正確に識別することができます目追跡装置を使用するも。 慣れの基準を満たしていないこれらの児のデータを省略します。 メモどのくらい幼児は、従属変数は、使い慣れた慣れテスト刺激を基準にして新たなテスト刺激を見て過ごした。

Results

In order to have enough power to see significant results, researchers need to test at least 16 infants, not including infants dropped from the study for failing to habituate, fussiness, falling asleep, parent interference, etc.. Infants who have habituated are expected to show low levels of looking when shown the habituation stimulus during test. If infants look longer at the novel test stimulus in comparison to the habituation test stimulus after they have habituated (Figure 1), researchers would conclude that infants discriminated the stimuli. Good test stimuli are well controlled and as similar to habituation trials as possible, with the exception of the key variable being manipulated, in this case shape.

Figure 1
Figure 1: Average looking time across infants during habituation and test phases. The habituation stimulus is identical to the items seen during habituation, resulting in very low looking times. Infants dishabituate, or look longer, at the novel test stimulus in comparison to the habituation stimulus, if they notice the different shape.

Applications and Summary

Other senses can also be tested using these same methods. For example, it is possible to measure infants’ habituation and dishabituation to auditory stimuli using pacifiers designed to measure the rate and strength of their sucking. Attentive babies suck more often and harder than babies who are habituated, so the same methods can be applied using different approaches.

Habituation methods are both powerful and limited in specific ways. When infants dishabituate, experimenters can conclude that they noticed some difference between familiar and novel test items, but it takes careful experimental design to draw conclusions from work with infants. Working with infants also creates special challenges. Most scientists do not have to worry about their participants needing a nap or diaper change during their study. However, habituation methods can be a powerful tool for studying participants unable to communicate. This approach is especially valuable to developmental scientists who are interested in studying abilities that humans are born with, as well as those that develop with very few life experiences.

Habituation methods are also used to study much more complex topics, such as the development of concepts of race, gender, and fairness. For example, by presenting infants with faces belonging to different racial groups, researchers discovered that 3-month-old babies identify new and old faces independent of race.1 However, between 6- and 9-months of age, infants undergo perceptual narrowing, after which they are more adept at recognizing individuals in their own racial group, but they find it difficult to discriminate between faces belonging to other racial groups. Thus, habituation methods represent a powerful tool for studying infant cognition and human development.

References

  1. Kelly, D. J., Quinn, P. C., Slater, A. M., Lee, K., Ge, L., & Pascalis, O. The other-race effect develops during infancy: Evidence of perceptual narrowing. Psychological Science. 18 (12), 1084-1089 (2007).

成績單

To explore the early stages of conceptual development—when infants are unable to reliably speak, understand speech, or precisely control movements—researchers have established clever techniques that use habituation methods.

Like adults, infants prefer to pay attention to new and interesting things. If left in the same environment, over time they become accustomed to their surroundings and pay less attention to them. This process is called habituation.

However, the moment something new happens, infants are ready to pay attention again. Such reengagement of attention following habituation is referred to as dishabituation.

Scientists can use these characteristic changes in attention as a tool for studying the thinking and learning processes of young infants.

This video demonstrates how to design and execute an infant habituation paradigm, as well as how to analyze and interpret results for investigating their shape discrimination.

In this experiment, six-month-old infants are exposed to different shape stimuli in two phases, thus using a within-subjects design to compare whether or not habituation towards one shape persists and dishabituation occurs with the presentation of a new shape.

In the initial phase, infants are shown stimuli on a video monitor: first an “attention-getter”—an image that moves and makes sounds to direct their attention—followed by a shape stimulus, such as a blue circle.

In this case, the dependent variable measured is the time that the infants spend looking at the shape stimulus. Because they (typically) spend more time looking during the first three trials, these times are averaged as the baseline time.

The habituation phase is continued until the infant’s time spent looking at the stimulus is 50% or less than baseline for three sequential trials. Thus, the number of trials required to reach habituation may vary between babies.

Once habituation is reached, the test phase is started, and only two trials are presented in a counterbalanced manner; that is, infants are again shown the attention-getter to start, after which, half will first see the familiar blue circle that was shown during the habituation phase, and the other half will start with a novel blue square.

When babies are presented with the familiar shape, they are predicted to remain habituated—their looking times will remain relatively unchanged. However, during the presentation of a novel stimulus, babies are expected to dishabituate—they will re-engage their attention and look longer when they detect a change.

Before the infant and parent arrive, prepare a quiet testing room by placing a comfortable chair in front of a large monitor equipped with a video camera.

Upon arrival, greet the infant and parent. Instruct the parent to hold their infant and remain as quiet as possible while looking at a point just below the center of the screen.

From another room, monitor the infant using the video feed from the camera. Initiate the software that controls stimuli presentation and records looking times. Note that in this view, you can only see whether the infant is looking at or away from the monitor and not what appears on their screen.

When the infant is looking at the monitor, press the ‘5’ key, which is assigned to log looking times. Notice that the program first displays a stimulus on the infant’s screen to capture their attention, followed by the blue circle.

As soon as the infant looks away for more than 1 s, release the timing key—automatically ending the trial—or, when they look at the screen for the maximum duration of 20 s.

After three trials, examine the baseline time—the calculated average looking time across these trials. Repeat trials until the infant reaches criterion for habituation. Remember that the number of trials required might vary across infants.

Once criterion has been reached, automatically proceed to the test phase that now includes a novel blue square in one of the two trials—counterbalanced across infants.

Following the test phase, end the session by thanking the parent and infant for participating.

To analyze the results, graph the mean looking times for all of the infants who met criterion during the habituation phase, and for the test phase, by stimulus shape—the familiar blue circle and novel blue square.

Over the course of the habituation trials, the average looking time decreased to be approximately half as long in duration.

When infants saw a new stimulus during the test phase—the blue square—they showed the hallmark signs of dishabituation. Notably, their looking times increased relative to the familiar test stimulus, suggesting that they noticed the new shape.

Now that you are familiar with the habituation methods used as a tool designed to study infant shape discrimination, let’s look at other ways that developmental psychologists use the paradigm.

Researchers can examine other sensory modalities. For example, it is possible to measure infants’ habituation and dishabituation to auditory stimuli using specially designed pacifiers that gage the rate and strength of their sucking. Attentive babies suck more often and harder than babies who are habituated.

Habituation is also used to study more complex topics, such as the development of concepts of race, gender, and fairness. For instance, by presenting infants with faces belonging to different racial groups, researchers discovered that 3-month-old babies identified new and old faces independent of race.

However, between 6- and 9-months of age, infants undergo perceptual narrowing, making them more adept at recognizing individuals in their own racial group, and less able to discriminate between faces belonging to other racial groups.

You’ve just watched JoVE’s introduction to examining habituation methods in infants. Now you should have a good understanding of how to setup and perform the experiment, as well as analyze and assess the results.

Thanks for watching!

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JoVE Science Education Database. JoVE Science Education. Habituation: Studying Infants Before They Can Talk. JoVE, Cambridge, MA, (2023).