1st Edition

Progress in infancy Research Volume 2

Edited By Jeffrey W. Fagen, Harlene Hayne Copyright 2002
    328 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    328 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    The Progress in Infancy Research Series is dedicated to the presentation of innovative and exciting research on infants, both human and animal. Each volume in the series is designed to stand alone and contains autonomous chapters which are based on high quality programs of research with infants. These chapters integrate the work of the authors with that of other experts working in the same or related areas. The authors wish to present high quality critical syntheses bearing on infant perception and sensation, learning and memory processes, and other aspects of development. This series will be a forum for the presentation of technological breakthroughs, methodological advances, and new integrations that might create platforms for future programmatic work on the complexities of infant behavior and development.

    Each volume in the series is dedicated to an outstanding investigator whose research has illuminated the nature of infant behavior and development, and whose contributions to the field have been of seminal importance.

    Contents: Preface. L.P. Lipsitt, Reminiscence and Rumination. L.P. Lipsitt, The Newborn as Informant. Y. Munakata, J.M. Stedron, Memory for Hidden Objects in Early Infancy: Behavior, Theory, and Neural Network Simulation. D. Mareschal, Connectionist Methods in Infancy Research. K.E. Adolph, M.A. Eppler, Flexibility and Specificity in Infant Motor Skill Acquisition. A.M. Skoczenski, Limitations on Visual Sensitivity During Infancy: Contrast Sensitivity, Vernier Acuity, and Orientation Processing. E. Reese, A Model of the Origins of Autobiographical Memory. M.J. Spence, D.S. Moore, Categorization of Infant-Directed Speech.

    Biography

    Jeffrey W. Fagen, Harlene Hayne

    "By reading this book, the reader gains insight into challenged infant behaviors and state-of-the-art research in the development of critical apsects of vision, communication, movement and memory."
    Doody's Notes