1st Edition

Perceptual Development in infancy The Minnesota Symposia on Child Psychology, Volume 20

Edited By A. Yonas Copyright 1988

    Each year, the Institute of Child Development brings together a group of distinguished investigators who share a common desire to understand the nature of development. The chapters in this volume are based on papers presented at the 20th of this continuing series, the Minnesota Symposia on Child Psychology. The meetings were held October 31 through November 2, 1985, at the University of Minnesota.

    1: The Recovery From Early Monocular Visual Deprivation in Kittens; 2: Infant Precursors of Later Visual Disorders: Correlation or Causality?; 3: Anatomical Constraints on Oculomotor Development: Implications for Infant Perception; 4: Sensory Selectivity, Attentional Control, and Cross-Channel Integration in Early Visual Development; 5: Visual Recalibration and the Development of Contrast and Optical Flow Perception; 6: Where Perceiving Ends and Thinking Begins: The Apprehension of Objects in Infancy; 7: Speech as an Intermodal Object of Perception; 8: Theories of Perception and Research in Perceptual Development; 9: Levels of Description and Constraints on Perceptual Development

    Biography

    Albert Yonas, University of Minnesota