Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Chapter 6 Perception Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Methods of Studying Infant Perception • Habituation: Discrimination learning • • • – “learning to be bored” Preferential looking – Study of visual acuity Evoked potentials: recorded as child looks Operant conditioning – R+ of one stimulus in a pair Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Vision • Present at birth • • • • • – Detect changes in brightness – Visually track moving objects By 4 months can discriminate colors Visual acuity at about 8 inches Prefer contour, contrast, & movement Prefer complex over simple patterns Prefer human face over all Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Figure 6.1 Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Vision 2 • Depth perception • – Newborns appear to have size constancy – The visual cliff: Gibson & Walk (1960) • A crawler (7 mo) will not cross the cliff • Can perceive the cliff by 2 months • Fear of drop-off requires crawling Infants as intuitive theorists: able to make sense of the world Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Hearing and Speech • Humans can hear well before birth • Newborns discriminate sounds that differ in • • • loudness, duration, direction, and pitch Two-3 month olds distinguish phonemes – Eimas (1985) “Ba & Pa” studies Newborns prefer female/mother’s voice Lose sensitivity to sounds not needed for home language Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Taste and Smell • Newborns can distinguish between sweet, • • • bitter, and sour tastes – Show a clear preference for sweet – Facial expressions reflect taste Cry and turn away from unpleasant smells Breast-fed babies recognize mother’s smell Mothers can identify their newborns by smell Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Touch, Temperature, and Pain • Sense of touch(& motion) before birth • • • – Useful for soothing a fussy baby At birth sensitivity to warm and cold Clearly sensitive to painful stimuli Do babies require anesthesia for surgery? – More harm from stress of pain – Recommended for circumcisions Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Integrating Sensory Information • Vision & touch, vision & hearing are • • • interrelated within the first month Cross-modal perception: previously seen objects hidden a bag are identified by touch Very early perceptual abilities are evidence for “Nature” Sensory system requires stimulation to develop normally – First 3-4 months considered critical Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 The development of Attention • From infancy on – Attention span increases • More able to concentrate on a task – Attention becomes more selective • Able to ignore distractions – More systematic perceptual searches • To achieve goals & solve problems Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 The Adult • Sensory and perceptual capacities decline • – May begin in early adulthood – Noticeable in the 40s – Typical by age 65 – Gradual and minor in the normal person – Compensation gradually increases Sensory threshold: point at which the least amount of a stimulus can be detected – Increases with age Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Sensory/Perceptual Problems • Vision by age 70: 9/10 wear corrective lenses • • – 1 in 4 will have cataracts – Pupil less responsive to light • Dim lighting is problematic • Dark and glare adaptation difficult Presbyopia: Middle age glasses – thickening of the lens Peripheral vision declines Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Hearing/Speech in Older Adults • Most have at least mild hearing loss • Presbycusis: loss of high-pitched sounds • • – More common and earlier in men Some difficulty with speech perception – May be cognitive or sensory – Background noise a problem Novel and complex tasks problematic Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 6 Other Senses in Older Adults • Over 70 taste and smell thresholds increase • • – Many are not affected at all: mostly men – Also affected by disease and medications – Loss of enjoyment of food may cause malnutrition in older adults Less sensitive to touch and temperature Less sensitive to mild but not sever pain