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Developmental Psychology I
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Developmental Psychology I
Perceptual and Cognitive Development

Three Volume Set


January 2005 | 1 298 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
This is the first of two three-volume collections on developmental psychology which provide a comprehensive and up-to-date synthesis of the most significant publications in the field of developmental psychology over the past century. Over a total of six volumes, the editors present the benchmark readings in the discipline, including highly cited theoretical articles, empirical articles, as well as some book chapters that have had great impact in terms of presenting research findings and influencing the key debates in the field. There is a particular emphasis on recent publications to complement older, classic works, illuminating new directions in the field theoretically and methodologically, and on representing the discipline from an international perspective.

In addition to the 88 key original publications included in the two collections, each of the volumes opens with an introductory editorial essay by the editors setting out the rationale behind the selection of papers in terms of their historical, theoretical and empirical importance in the development of the field. The net effect is to provide an integrated account of this very established and expansive discipline.


 
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY I: PERCEPTUAL AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
 
VOLUME ONE: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON PERCEPTION AND COGNITION
 
PART ONE: INFANCY
J Piaget
The First Year of Life of the Child
E Spelke
Initial Knowledge
Six Suggestions

 
E J Gibson
Exploratory Behavior in the Development of Perceiving and Acting, and the Acquisition of Knowledge
Y Munakata et al
Rethinking Infant Knowledge
Toward an Adaptive Process Account of Success and Failures in Object Permanence

 
E Thelen and E Bates
Connectionism and Dynamic Systems
Are They Really Different?

 
M H Johnson
Functional Brain Development during Infancy
Rovee-Collier
Dissociations in Infant Memory
Rethinking the Development of Implicit and Explicit Memory

 
 
PART TWO: CHILDHOOD
J Piaget
Piaget's Theory
L S Vygotsky
Tool and Symbol in Child Development / Internalization of Higher Mental Functions
J S Bruner
On Cognitive Growth
M Cole
Context, Modularity and the Cultural Constitution of Development
K Plunkett et al
Connectionism and Developmental Psychology
J Flavell and H M Wellman
Metamemory
J I M Carpendale and C Lewis
Constructing an Understanding of Mind
The Development of Children's Social Understanding within Social Interaction

 
S Carey
Conceptual Differences between Children and Adults
 
VOLUME TWO: INFANT PERCEPTUAL AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
 
PART ONE: VISUAL PERCEPTION
A M Slater et al
Form Perception at Birth
Cohen and Younger (1984) Revisited

 
A M Slater, A Mattock and E Brown
Size Constancy at Birth
Newborn Infants' Responses to Retinal and Real Size

 
P J Kellman and E R Spelke
Perception of Partly Occluded Objects in Infancy
 
PART TWO: AUDITORY PERCEPTION
D W Muir and J Field
Newborn Infants Orient to Sounds
L W Olsho et al
Pure-Tone Sensitivity of Human Infants
 
PART THREE: CROSS-MODAL PERCEPTION
E S Spelke
The Infant's Acquisition of Knowledge of Bimodally Specified Events
B A Morrongiello, K D Fenwick and G Chance
Cross-Modal Learning in Newborn Infants
Inferences about Properties of Auditory-Visual Events

 
L E Bahrick
Increasing Specificity in Perceptual Development
Infants' Detection of Nested Levels of Multimodal Stimulation

 
 
PART FOUR: MEMORY AND KNOWLEDGE
R Baillargeon
Representing the Existence and the Location of Hidden Objects
Object Permanence in 6- andd 8-Month-Old Infants

 
A Diamond and P S Goldman-Rakic
Comparison of Human Infants and Rhesus Monkeys on Piaget's A Task
Evidence for Dependence on Dorsolateral Pre-Frontal Cortex

 
M K Moore and A N Meltzoff
New Findings on Object Permanence
A Developmental Difference between Two Types of Occlusion

 
 
PART FIVE: IMITATION
A N Meltzoff and M K Moore
Early Imitation within a Functional Framework
The Importance of Person Identity, Movement and Development

 
T Field et al
Discrimination and Imitation of Facial Expressions by Term and Preterm Neonates
 
PART SIX: CAUSALITY
A M Leslie and S Keeble
Do Six-Month-Old Infants Perceive Causality?
L M Oakes and K N Kannass
That's the Way the Ball Bounces
Infants' and Adults' Perception of Spatial and Temporal Contiguity in Collisions Involving Bouncing Balls

 
 
VOLUME THREE: PERCEPTUAL AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDHOOD
 
PART ONE: SPATIAL COGNITION AND REPRESENTATION
J H Flavell
The Development of Inferences about Others
A Feldman and L Acredolo
The Effect of Active versus Passive Exploration on Memory for Spatial Location in Children
J S DeLoache
Symbolic Functioning in Very Young Children
Understanding of Pictures and Models

 
 
PART TWO: COGNITION AND LOGIC
S A Rose and M Blank
The Potency of Context in Children's Cognition
An Illustration through Conservation

 
R Siegler
How Does Change Occur
A Microgenetic Study of Number Conservation

 
J McGarrigle, J Grieve and M Hughes
Interpreting Inclusion
A Contribution to the Study of the Child's Cognitive and Linguistic Development

 
 
PART THREE: MEMORY
R Fivush
Event Memory in Early Childhood
S Ceci and M Bruck
Suggestibility and the Child Witness
An Historical Review and Synthesis

 
 
PART FOUR: THEORY OF MIND
H Wimmer and J Perner
Beliefs about Beliefs
Representation and Constraining Function of Wrong Beliefs in Young Children's Understanding of Deception

 
H M Wellman, D Cross and J Watson
Meta-Analysis of Theory of Mind Development
The Truth about False Belief

 
 
PART FIVE: NUMBER
R Gelman and E Meck
Pre-Schoolers' Counting
Principles before Skill

 
C Sophian
Limitations on Pre-School Children's Knowledge about Counting
Using Counting to Compare Two Sets

 
 
PART SIX: REASONING
A Karmiloff-Smith and B Inhelder
If You Want to Get Ahead, Get a Theory
M Gauvain and B Rogoff
Collaborative Problem-Solving and Children's Planning Skills

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ISBN: 9781412902304
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