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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
Perceptual and Cognitive Development illustrates how the
developmental approach yields fundamental contributions to our
understanding of perception and cognition as a whole. The book
discusses how to relate developmental, comparative, and
neurological considerations to early learning and development, and
it presents fundamental problems in cognition and language, such as
the acquisition of a coherent, organized, and shared understanding
of concepts and language. Discussions of learning, memory,
attention, and problem solving are embedded within specific
accounts of the neurological status of developing minds and the
nature of knowledge.
Reflecting the focus of a Jean Piaget Symposium entitled Biology and Knowledge: Structural Constraints on Development, this volume presents many of the emergent themes discussed. Among these themes are: Structural constraints on cognitive development and learning come in many shapes and forms and involve appeal to more than one level of analysis. To postulate innate knowledge is not to deny that humans can acquire new concepts. It is unlikely that there is only one learning mechanism, even if one prefers to work with general as opposed to domain-specific mechanisms. The problems of induction with respect to concept acquisition are even harder than originally thought.
Reflecting the focus of a Jean Piaget Symposium entitled "Biology
and Knowledge: Structural Constraints on Development," this volume
presents many of the emergent themes discussed. Among them:
This book deals primarily with the preschool child's conception of number and how that conception develops. This central concern is, however, embedded in a larger framework, namely, an overriding interest in early cognitive capacities and their relationship to subsequent capacities. The initial chapters develop this broader framework.
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