Young children's understanding of the role that sensory experiences play in knowledge acquisition.

3 studies investigated whether young children understand that the acquisition of certain types of knowledge depends on the modality of the sensory experience involved. 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children were exposed to pairs of objects that either looked the same but felt different, or that felt the same but looked different. In Study 1, 36 children were asked to state, when one of these objects was hidden inside a toy tunnel, whether they would need to see the object or feel it in order to determine its identity. In Study 2, 48 children were asked to state which of 2 puppets knew that an object hidden inside a tunnel possessed a given visual or tactile property, when one puppet was looking at the object and the other was feeling it. In Study 3, 72 children were asked, in a scenario similar to Study 2, to state for each puppet whether he could tell, just by looking or by feeling, that the hidden object possessed a certain visual or tactile property. Children were also asked what was the best way to find out whether a given object possessed a certain visual or tactile property. Results of all 3 studies suggest that an appreciation of the different types of knowledge our senses can provide (i.e., modality-specific knowledge) develops between the ages of 3 and 5. The results are discussed in relation to young children's developing understanding of the role that informational access plays in knowledge acquisition.

[1]  N. Goodman Languages of Art , 1968 .

[2]  Fred I. Dretske,et al.  Seeing and Knowing. , 1969 .

[3]  M. Greenberg,et al.  Conceptual Perspective Taking in 2- to 6-Year-Old Children , 1976 .

[4]  J. Flavell,et al.  The development of knowledge about visual perception. , 1977, Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation.

[5]  H. E. Howe,et al.  Social cognitive development , 1978 .

[6]  William P. Alston,et al.  Knowledge and the Flow of Information , 1985 .

[7]  G. Stricker,et al.  Handbook of Developmental Psychology , 1982 .

[8]  J. Flavell The development of children's knowledge about the appearance-reality distinction. , 1986, The American psychologist.

[9]  H. Wimmer,et al.  Three-year-olds' difficulty with false belief: The case for a conceptual deficit , 1987 .

[10]  John H. Flavell,et al.  The development of children's knowledge about the mind: From cognitive connections to mental representations. , 1988 .

[11]  D. Olson,et al.  Developing theories of mind , 1988 .

[12]  Alison Gopnik,et al.  Knowing How You Know: Young Children's Ability to Identify and Remember the Sources of Their Beliefs. , 1988 .

[13]  Josef Perner,et al.  Children's Understanding of Informational Access as Source of Knowledge. , 1988 .

[14]  B. H. Pillow Early understanding of perception as a source of knowledge. , 1989, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[15]  J. Flavell,et al.  Young children's ability to differentiate appearance-reality and level 2 perspectives in the tactile modality. , 1989, Child development.

[16]  J. Perner Experiential Awareness and Children’s Episodic Memory , 1990 .

[17]  P. Bryant,et al.  Young children understanding that looking leads to knowing (so long as they are looking into a single barrel). , 1990, Child development.

[18]  A. Gopnik,et al.  Young Children's Ability to Identify the Sources of Their Beliefs. , 1991 .

[19]  M Taylor,et al.  Perspective taking and theory of mind: do children predict interpretive diversity as a function of differences in observers' knowledge? , 1991, Child development.

[20]  B. Bower A Child's Theory of Mind , 1993 .

[21]  J. Perner Understanding the Representational Mind , 1993 .