In this review article, we describe the mobile paradigm, a method used for more than 50 years to assess how infants learn and remember sensorimotor contingencies. The literature on the mobile paradigm demonstrates that infants below 6 months of age can remember the learning environment weeks after when reminded periodically and integrate temporally distributed information across modalities. The latter ability is only possible if events occur within a temporal window of a few days, and the width of this required window changes as a function of age. A major critique of these conclusions is that the majority of this literature has neglected the embodied experience, such that motor behavior was considered an equivalent developmental substitute ...
The ability to understand others’ actions is central in human interaction. Experience producing acti...
There is a growing body of evidence that important aspects of human cognition have been marginalized...
Abstract In order to understand how experience of an action alters functional brain responses to vis...
In this review article, we describe the mobile paradigm, a method used for more than 50 years to ass...
Contains fulltext : 167060.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The 'sense of...
Contains fulltext : 194458.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The developme...
Most research with the mobile paradigm has the underlying assumption that young infants can selectiv...
Abstract—Infants are able to adaptively associate auditory stimuli with visual stimuli even in their...
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to outline the challenges of psychological research in addres...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
There is a growing body of evidence that important aspects of human cognition have been marginalized...
Questions about infants’ development of agency have been a topic of great interest for developmental...
The first goal of this article is to review recent advances in understanding how new motor skills fa...
There is much to like in Campos et al.’s (this issue) comprehensive and thoughtful target article on...
This work is supported by a scholarship from the University of Stirling and a research grant from SI...
The ability to understand others’ actions is central in human interaction. Experience producing acti...
There is a growing body of evidence that important aspects of human cognition have been marginalized...
Abstract In order to understand how experience of an action alters functional brain responses to vis...
In this review article, we describe the mobile paradigm, a method used for more than 50 years to ass...
Contains fulltext : 167060.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The 'sense of...
Contains fulltext : 194458.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The developme...
Most research with the mobile paradigm has the underlying assumption that young infants can selectiv...
Abstract—Infants are able to adaptively associate auditory stimuli with visual stimuli even in their...
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to outline the challenges of psychological research in addres...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
There is a growing body of evidence that important aspects of human cognition have been marginalized...
Questions about infants’ development of agency have been a topic of great interest for developmental...
The first goal of this article is to review recent advances in understanding how new motor skills fa...
There is much to like in Campos et al.’s (this issue) comprehensive and thoughtful target article on...
This work is supported by a scholarship from the University of Stirling and a research grant from SI...
The ability to understand others’ actions is central in human interaction. Experience producing acti...
There is a growing body of evidence that important aspects of human cognition have been marginalized...
Abstract In order to understand how experience of an action alters functional brain responses to vis...