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Theories of Infant Development
J. Gavin Bremner (Edited by), Bremner (Author), Alan Slater (Edited by)
9780631233381, Wiley
Paperback / softback, published 6 August 2003
400 pages
23 x 15.5 x 2.8 cm, 0.59 kg
"With so much contemporary research activity in developmental psychology concentrating on infants, this book is timely and welcome. It should be most helpful to those instructors who are looking for a text to use in teaching an upper-level undergraduate course focusing on infant development or a first-year graduate-level survey course that provides broad coverage of the major topical areas including perceptual, motor, cognitive, and social development. A strong and balanced group of contributors does a first rate job of introducing students to the major issues, theoretical approaches, and empirical findings that students new to the study of infant development need to know." Paul C. Quinn, Professor of Psychology, University of Delaware "This book consists of a nice collection of chapters that present introductions to theoretical frameworks spanning across the whole range of infant research activities. As a tribute to George Butterworth, it works exceptionally well. All the invited authors have worked with George Butterworth. The breadth of topics covered bears testimony to the intellectual range and importance of George Butterworth for the field of infant development. But this book is more than a eulogy. It is also a lucid and up-to-date presentation of some of the most influential theoretical frameworks for studying infant development. As such, it is an invaluable tool for senior undergraduates, postgraduates, or even faculty who wish to brush up on the latest thinking. I strongly recommend it." Dr Denis Mareschal, Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck College, University of London "For a long time we have needed a comprehensive book that presents and evaluates theories of infant development. It has finally arrived, in the form of an edited volume by Gavin Bremner and Alan Slater, fittingly dedicated to George Butterworth who contributed so much to our understandig of theories of development. A great strength of the book is that its chapters are written by the experts in each area rather than one author attempting to cover all facets of the theoretical landscape. The result is an in-depth look at theories of perceptual-motor development (e.g., dynamical systems, updated Gibsonian theory, and the impact of neuroscientific evidence on our theories), cognitive development (object concept, memory, developmental cognitive science), and social development (attachment, mother-infant interaction, joint visual attention). The book is up-to-date and provocative; I predict it will become the standard that researchers and graduate students turn to for a comprehensive treatment of current theories of infant development." Professor Rachel Keen Clifton, University of Massachusetts "The study of infant development is foundational to many of the theoretical and applied issues that psychologists address. This excellent volume will be of interest not just to infancy researchers and their students, but to all scientists who adopt a developmental perspective to understand human psychological functioning." Jeffrey J. Lockman, Professor of Psychology, Tulane University “A collection of excellent studies of early infant development.”
United States Association for Body Psychotherapy Newsletter
This volume provides an authoritative survey of all the major theories of infant development.
Contributors ix Preface xi Part I Development of Perception and Action 1 A Dynamical Systems Perspective on Infant Action and its Development 3 2 A Developmental Perspective on Visual Proprioception 30 3 From Direct Perception to the Primacy of Action: A Closer Look at James Gibson’s Ecological 4 The Development of Perception in a Multimodal Environment 90 5 Neuroscience Perspectives on Infant Development 121 Part II Cognitive Development 6 The Case for Developmental Cognitive Science: Theories of People and Things 145 7 Theories of Development of the Object Concept 174 8 Remembering Infancy: Accessing Our Earliest Experiences 204 Part III Social Development and Communication 9 Maternal Sensitivity and Infant Temperament in the Formation of Attachment 233 10 Emerging Co-Awareness 258 11 Processes of Development in Early Communication 284 12 Joint Visual Attention in Infancy 317 Afterword: Tribute to George Butterworth 355 Author Index 362 Subject Index 374
Eugene C. Goldfield and Peter H. Wolff
David I. Anderson, Joseph J. Campos, and Marianne A. Barbu-Roth
Approach to Psychology 70
Alan Costall
Lorraine E. Bahrick
Mark H. Johnson and Annette Karmiloff-Smith
Andrew N. Meltzoff
Scott P. Johnson
Alan Fogel
Marinus H. van IJzendoorn and Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg
Philippe Rochat
David Messer
George Butterworth
Peter E. Bryant
Subject Areas: Psychology [JM]
