Critical period: a history of the transition from questions of when, to what, to how.

Although age appears to be the defining characteristic of the concept of critical period, central to its investigation is the recognition that there are specific events which must occur in a particular order for the typical development of certain characteristics to occur. A brief history of some research on critical periods reveals that our questions have shifted from those of: is there a critical period and, if so, when does it occur; to questions of what contributes to the criticality of the period; and finally to how is criticality controlled during development. Abandoning age as a defining component of development has permitted the discovery of exactly how previous and current events construct subsequent events in the process of development. The shifts in questions about critical periods mark an increasing sophistication in understanding how development can be controlled.

[1]  H. Spemann Embryonic development and induction , 1938 .

[2]  J. A. MULLIGAN,et al.  Bird Song , 1964, Nature.

[3]  P. Bateson THE CHARACTERISTICS AND CONTEXT OF IMPRINTING , 1966, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.

[4]  G. Beer Embryos and ancestors , 1940 .

[5]  L. A. Eales Song learning in zebra finches: some effects of song model availability on what is learnt and when , 1985, Animal Behaviour.

[6]  J. P. Scott Critical periods in behavioral development. , 1962, Science.

[7]  A. Riesen THE DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY OF SENSORY DEPRIVATION , 1977 .

[8]  D. Wahlsten,et al.  Axonal guidance during development of the great cerebral commissures: Descriptive and experimental studies, in vivo, on the role of preformed glial pathways , 1982, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[9]  H. Harlow Chapter 8 – The Affectional Systems1 , 1965 .

[10]  P. Marler A comparative approach to vocal learning: Song development in white-crowned sparrows. , 1970 .

[11]  J. Bowlby Attachment and loss: retrospect and prospect. , 1969, The American journal of orthopsychiatry.

[12]  W. Mason,et al.  Formation and expression of filial attachment in rhesus monkeys raised with living and inanimate mother substitutes. , 1988, Developmental psychobiology.

[13]  E. Lenneberg Biological Foundations of Language , 1967 .

[14]  George F. Michel,et al.  Developmental Psychobiology: An Interdisciplinary Science , 1995 .

[15]  P. Bateson How do sensitive periods arise and what are they for? , 1979, Animal Behaviour.

[16]  J. Rosenblatt,et al.  "Critical Periods" in the Development of Behavior. , 1963, Science.

[17]  M. Bornstein Sensitive periods in development: structural characteristics and causal interpretations. , 1989, Psychological bulletin.

[18]  H. Harlow,et al.  The Affectional Systems , 1965 .

[19]  Stephen Hughes Attachment and Loss. Vol. I , 1969, Mental Health.

[20]  S. Gilbert Ecological developmental biology: developmental biology meets the real world. , 2001, Developmental biology.