Reasoning about containment events in very young infants

[1]  L. Frank The Society for Research in Child Development , 1935 .

[2]  J. Piaget The construction of reality in the child , 1954 .

[3]  A. Silverstein The Developmental Psychology of Jean Piaget , 1965 .

[4]  P. L. Adams THE ORIGINS OF INTELLIGENCE IN CHILDREN , 1976 .

[5]  C. Rovee-Collier,et al.  Advances in infancy research , 1981 .

[6]  Infants' sensitivity to pictorial depth information , 1984 .

[7]  D. Ingle,et al.  Brain mechanisms and spatial vision , 1985 .

[8]  E. Spelke Preferential-looking methods as tools for the study of cognition in infancy. , 1985 .

[9]  M. Bornstein Habituation of attention as a measure of visual information processing in human infants: Summary , 1985 .

[10]  Norman A. Krasnegor,et al.  Measurement of Audition and Vision in the First Year of Postnatal Life: A Methodological Overview , 1985 .

[11]  Gilberte Pieraut-Le Bonniec,et al.  From visual-motor anticipation to conceptualization: Reaction to solid and hollow objects and knowledge of the function of containment , 1985 .

[12]  Renee L Baillargeon,et al.  Object Permanence in 3 Vi- and 4 l/2-Month-01d Infants , 1987 .

[13]  Infant Understanding of Containment: An Affordance Perceived or a Relationship Conceived?. , 1988 .

[14]  Darla J. MacLean,et al.  Conceptual development in infancy: the understanding of containment. , 1989 .

[15]  Marshall M. Haith,et al.  Stability of Visual Expectations at 3.0 Months of Age. , 1990 .

[16]  Marshall M. Haith,et al.  Young Infants' Visual Expectations for Symmetric and Asymmetric Stimulus Sequences. , 1991 .

[17]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Object permanence in young infants: further evidence. , 1991, Child development.

[18]  Renée Baillargeon,et al.  Reasoning about the height and location of a hidden object in 4.5- and 6.5-month-old infants , 1991, Cognition.

[19]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  The Development of Young Infants' Intuitions about Support , 1992 .

[20]  E. Spelke,et al.  Origins of knowledge. , 1992, Psychological review.

[21]  Amy Needham,et al.  Intuitions about support in 4.5-month-old infants , 1993, Cognition.

[22]  E. Spelke Initial knowledge: six suggestions , 1994, Cognition.

[23]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Calibration-based reasoning about collision events in 11-month-old infants , 1994, Cognition.

[24]  R. Baillargeon How Do Infants Learn About the Physical World? , 1994 .

[25]  R. Baillargeon A model of physical reasoning in infancy , 1995 .

[26]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  The acquisition of physical knowledge in infancy. , 1995 .

[27]  Ad W. Smitsman,et al.  Infants' Perception of Dynamic Relations Between Objects: Passing Through or Support? , 1995 .

[28]  A. Leslie A theory of agency. , 1995 .

[29]  E. Spelke,et al.  Infants' knowledge of object motion and human action. , 1995 .

[30]  L. Nadel,et al.  Location memory in healthy preterm and full-term infants , 1996 .

[31]  A. Premack,et al.  Causal cognition : a multidisciplinary debate , 1996 .

[32]  Renée Baillargeon,et al.  The development of calibration-based reasoning about collision events in young infants , 1998, Cognition.

[33]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Object Individuation in Infancy: The Use of Featural Information in Reasoning about Occlusion Events , 1998, Cognitive Psychology.

[34]  A Aguiar,et al.  Eight-and-a-half-month-old infants' reasoning about containment events. , 1998, Child development.

[35]  Karen Wynn,et al.  Limits to Infants' Knowledge of Objects: The Case of Magical Appearance , 1998 .

[36]  Infants' physical reasoning about containment and occlusion: A surprising decalage , 1998 .

[37]  R. Baillargeon Young infants’ expectations about hidden objects: a reply to three challenges , 1999 .

[38]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Perseveration and problem solving in infancy. , 1999, Advances in child development and behavior.

[39]  T. Wilcox Object individuation: infants’ use of shape, size, pattern, and color , 1999, Cognition.

[40]  E. Spelke Innateness, learning, and the development of object representation , 1999 .

[41]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  2.5-Month-Old Infants' Reasoning about When Objects Should and Should Not Be Occluded , 1999, Cognitive Psychology.

[42]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Reasoning about collisions involving inert objects in 7.5-month-old infants , 2000 .

[43]  Susan J. Hespos,et al.  Infants' Knowledge About Occlusion and Containment Events: A Surprising Discrepancy , 2001, Psychological science.