The Origins of Object Knowledge
Bruce M. Hood and Laurie R. Santos
Abstract
Do humans start life with the capacity to detect and mentally represent the objects
around them? Or is our object knowledge instead derived only as the result of
prolonged experience with the external world? Are we simply able to perceive objects
by watching their actions in the world, or do we have to act on objects ourselves in
order to learn about their behavior? Finally, do we come to know all aspects of
objects in the same way, or are some aspects of our object understanding more
epistemologically privileged than others? This book presents an up-to-date survey of
the research into how the ... More
Do humans start life with the capacity to detect and mentally represent the objects
around them? Or is our object knowledge instead derived only as the result of
prolonged experience with the external world? Are we simply able to perceive objects
by watching their actions in the world, or do we have to act on objects ourselves in
order to learn about their behavior? Finally, do we come to know all aspects of
objects in the same way, or are some aspects of our object understanding more
epistemologically privileged than others? This book presents an up-to-date survey of
the research into how the developing human mind understands the world of objects and
their properties. It presents some of the findings from research groups in the field
of object representation approached from the perspective of developmental and
comparative psychology. Topics covered in the book all address some aspect of what
objects are from a psychological perspective; how humans and animals conceive what
they are made of; what properties they possess; how we count them and how we
categorize them; even how the difference between animate and inanimate objects leads
to different expectations. The chapters also cover the variety of methodologies and
techniques that must be used to study infants, young children, and non-human
primates and the value of combining approaches to discovering what each group
knows.
Keywords:
object knowledge,
human mind,
objects,
object understanding,
object representation,
developmental psychology,
comparative psychology,
properties,
inanimate objects,
non-human primates
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2009 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199216895 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: March 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199216895.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Bruce M. Hood, Editor
Chair of Developmental Psychology, University of Bristol,
UK
Laurie R. Santos, Editor
Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Yale University,
New Haven, USA
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