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Vision - Its Development In Infant And Child (Paperback)
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Vision - Its Development In Infant And Child (Paperback)
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VISION ITS DEVELOPMENT IN INFANT AND CHILD BY ARNOLD GESELL, M. D.
FRANCES L. ILG, M. D. GLENNA E. BULLIS Assisted by VIVIENNE ILG, O.
D. and G. N. GETMAN, O. D. PAUL B. HOEBER, INC. MEDICAL BOOK
DEPARTMENT OF HARPER i-BROTHERS PREFACE The background, scope, and
genesis of the present volume are out lined in an introductory
chapter which follows. There is not much more which needs to be
said by way of preface. The investigations of the Yale Clinic of
Child Development since its founding in 1911 have been mainly
concerned with the growth aspects of early human behavior. All
told, the behavior characteristics of 34 age levels have been
charted, encompassing the first ten years of life. An intensive
longitudinal study of a group of five infants in 1927 estab lished
methods for a systematic normative survey. These methods in cluded
developmental examinations and inventories at lunar month intervals
during the first year of life. Concurrent cinema records were
analyzed to define significant behavior patterns and growth trends.
Special attention was given to the ontogenetic patterning of
posture, locomotion, prehension, and manipulation. Cinemanalysis,
both of normative and experimental data, demon strated that the
eyes play an important role in the ontogenesis of the total action
system of the total child. The nature and the dynamics of that role
constitute the subject matter of the present study. The adult human
eye has been likened to a camera. This analogy has had some truth
and much tradition in its favor. But it has tended to obscure the
developmental factors which determine the structure and the
organization of the visual functions during infancy and child hood.
The development ofvision in the individual child is an extremely v
PREFACE complex and protracted process for the very good reason
that it took countless ages of evolution to bring human vision to
its present pre eminence. Our culture is becoming increasingly eye
minded with the advancing perfection and implementation of the
organ of sight. What is that organ It is more than a dioptric lens
and a retinal film. It embraces enormous areas of the cerebrum it
is deeply involved in the autonomic nervous system it is identified
reflexively and directively with the skeletal musculature from head
and hand to foot. Vision is so perva sively bound up with the past
and present performances of the organism that it must be
interpreted in terms of a total, unitary, integrated action system.
The nature of the integration, in turn, can be under stood only
through an appreciation of the orderly stages and relativi ties of
development whereby the integration itself is progressively at
tained. The authors have attempted to achieve a closer acquaintance
with the interrelations of the visual system per se and the total
action system of the child. This finally entailed the use of the
retinoscope and of analytic optornetry at early age levels where
these technical procedures ordinarily are not applied. The
examinations of the visual functions and of visual skills were
really conducted as behavior tests, not only to determine the
refractive status of the eyes, but also to determine the reactions
of the child as an organism to specific and total test situations.
The objective findings have been correlated with the cumulative evi
dence furnished by the developmental examinations, numerous inter
views, and naturalisticobservations of the children at home and in
a guidance nursery. Although the conclusions of our study are
prelimi nary in character, we may hope that they will contribute to
a better understanding of the child in terms of vision and a better
understand ing of vision in terms of the child. The two should not
be sundered. With increased knowledge it is possible that the
visual behavior of the individual child will become an acute index
for the appraisal of fundamental constitutional traits...
General
Imprint: |
Read Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
March 2007 |
First published: |
March 2007 |
Authors: |
Arnold Gesell
|
Dimensions: |
216 x 140 x 19mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
348 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4067-7485-6 |
Categories: |
Books >
Science & Mathematics >
Science: general issues >
General
|
LSN: |
1-4067-7485-5 |
Barcode: |
9781406774856 |
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