2001
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00310
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Infants Parse Dynamic Action

Abstract: As observers of human behavior, infants are faced with a complex flow of motion in which pauses are rare and only occasionally coincide with boundaries between intentional actions. Two studies investigated whether, despite such complexity, 10- to 11-month-old infants (N = 16 for each study) possess skills for parsing ongoing behavior along boundaries correlated with the initiation and completion of intentions. After being familiarized with digitized sequences of continuous everyday action, infants showed renew… Show more

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Cited by 478 publications
(310 citation statements)
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“…Exploration into children's early linguistic representations is a critical part of the effort to understand how humans of all ages represent events (Baldwin et al, 2001;Baldwin, Andersson, Saffran, & Meyer, 2008;Wolff, 2008;Zacks, 2010). By bringing together the linguistic tests for novel verb comprehension with stimulus manipulations from research on prelinguistic cognition, we can make detailed, testable predictions about how children make inferences about language from the events they see, and how language in turn reflects the structure of event representations.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Exploration into children's early linguistic representations is a critical part of the effort to understand how humans of all ages represent events (Baldwin et al, 2001;Baldwin, Andersson, Saffran, & Meyer, 2008;Wolff, 2008;Zacks, 2010). By bringing together the linguistic tests for novel verb comprehension with stimulus manipulations from research on prelinguistic cognition, we can make detailed, testable predictions about how children make inferences about language from the events they see, and how language in turn reflects the structure of event representations.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some degree of event segmentation would seem to be a pre-requisite for event conceptualization: how could you consider possible construals of an event if you hadn't identified some chunk of experience to interpret? We know that spatiotemporal contiguity is likely to play a role in children's event segmentation: young children look longer at videos where pauses are inserted in the middle of actions, than ones where the pauses coincide with event boundaries (Baldwin, Baird, Saylor, & Clark, 2001). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Action experience may also provide infants with information about the behavioral regularities that typically accompany an actor's goal (e.g. eye gaze, bodily trajectory, bodily orientation; see Baird and Baldwin (2001) and Baldwin, Baird, Saylor, and Clark (2001)). Either of these accounts would predict similar effects of watching an actor use the mittens in a coordinated fashion on infants' subsequent perception of mittened action.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Infants represent actions not as purely physical motions through space but rather as directed at objects or states of affairs (Baldwin et al 2001;Csibra et al 2003;Gergely et al 1995;Moore 1999;Woodward 1998;Phillips et al 2002). To illustrate, in one study (Woodward 1998), 6-month-old infants viewed a person reaching for and grasping an object.…”
Section: What Infants Know About Intentional Action and How They Mighmentioning
confidence: 99%