Developmental origin of the animate-inanimate distinction.

The authors examine recent theoretical perspectives of the development of the animate-inanimate distinction in infancy. From these theoretical views emerge 7 characteristic properties, each related to physical or psychological causality, that distinguish animates from inanimates. The literature is reviewed for evidence of infants' ability to perceive and understand each of these properties. Infants associate some animate properties with people by 6 months, but they do not associate the appropriate properties to the broad category of animates and inanimates until at least the middle of the 2nd year. The authors offer a theoretical proposal whereby infants acquire knowledge about the properties of different object kinds through a sensitive perceptual system and a domain general associative learning mechanism that extracts correlations among dynamic and static features.

[1]  I. Sigel,et al.  HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY , 2006 .

[2]  F. Heider,et al.  An experimental study of apparent behavior , 1944 .

[3]  J. Gibson,et al.  Perceptual learning; differentiation or enrichment? , 1955, Psychological review.

[4]  A. Michotte The perception of causality , 1963 .

[5]  H. Ricciuti Object grouping and selective ordering behavior in infants 12 to 24 months old. , 1965 .

[6]  K. Nelson Some Evidence for the Cognitive Primacy of Categorization and Its Functional Basis. , 1973 .

[7]  E. Gibson,et al.  Principles of Perceptual Learning and Development , 1973 .

[8]  R. Golinkoff,et al.  Infants' Perception of Semantically Defined Action Role Changes in Filmed Events. , 1975 .

[9]  Wayne D. Gray,et al.  Basic objects in natural categories , 1976, Cognitive Psychology.

[10]  J. N. Bassili Temporal and spatial contingencies in the perception of social events , 1976 .

[11]  A. Meltzoff,et al.  Imitation of Facial and Manual Gestures by Human Neonates , 1977, Science.

[12]  Eleanor Rosch,et al.  Principles of Categorization , 1978 .

[13]  T. Field Differential behavioral and cardiac responses of 3-month-old infants to a mirror and peer. , 1979 .

[14]  E. Rosch,et al.  Cognition and Categorization , 1980 .

[15]  Nancy Rader,et al.  Attention. The perceiver as performer , 1979 .

[16]  S L Oviatt,et al.  The emerging ability to comprehend language: an experimental approach. , 1980, Child development.

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

[18]  E. Spelke,et al.  The development of thoughts about animate and inanimate objects: Implications for research in social cognition , 1981 .

[19]  E. Rosch,et al.  Categorization of Natural Objects , 1981 .

[20]  A. Leslie The Perception of Causality in Infants , 1982, Perception.

[21]  Sharon L. Oviatt,et al.  Inferring What Words Mean: Early Development in Infants' Comprehension of Common Object Names. , 1982 .

[22]  E. Spelke,et al.  Perception of partly occluded objects in infancy , 1983, Cognitive Psychology.

[23]  L. Fenson Developmental Trends for Action and Speech in Pretend Play , 1984 .

[24]  A. Leslie Infant perception of a manual pick-up event. , 1984 .

[25]  N. Fox,et al.  Social perception in infants , 1985 .

[26]  D. Medin,et al.  The role of theories in conceptual coherence. , 1985, Psychological review.

[27]  S. Carey Conceptual Change in Childhood , 1985 .

[28]  B. Younger The segregation of items into categories by ten-month-old infants. , 1985, Child development.

[29]  D R Proffitt,et al.  The development of infant sensitivity to biomechanical motions. , 1985, Child development.

[30]  Children's Judgment and Reasoning about Aliveness: Effects of Object, Age, and Cultural/Social Background. , 1985 .

[31]  R. Siegler,et al.  Children's understandings of the attributes of life. , 1986, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[32]  E. Markman,et al.  Categories and induction in young children , 1986, Cognition.

[33]  L B Cohen,et al.  Developmental change in infants' perception of correlations among attributes. , 1986, Child development.

[34]  A. Leslie Pretense and representation: The origins of "theory of mind." , 1987 .

[35]  M. Legerstee,et al.  The development of infants' responses to people and a doll: Implications for research in communication , 1987 .

[36]  A. Leslie,et al.  Do six-month-old infants perceive causality? , 1987, Cognition.

[37]  E. Markman,et al.  Young children's inductions from natural kinds: the role of categories and appearances. , 1987, Child development.

[38]  Giyoo Hatano,et al.  Young Children's Spontaneous Personification as Analogy. , 1987 .

[39]  Thomas R. Shultz,et al.  The development of the understanding of human behavior: From agency to intentionality. , 1988 .

[40]  B. Bertenthal,et al.  Dynamical pattern-analysis predicts recognition and discrimination of biomechanical motions , 1988 .

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

[42]  A. Meltzoff Infant imitation and memory: nine-month-olds in immediate and deferred tests. , 1988, Child development.

[43]  A. Meltzoff Infant Imitation After a 1-Week Delay: Long-Term Memory for Novel Acts and Multiple Stimuli. , 1988, Developmental psychology.

[44]  J. Mandler,et al.  The cradle of categorization: Is the basic level basic? , 1988 .

[45]  J. Mandler How to build a baby: On the development of an accessible representational system☆ , 1988 .

[46]  R. Gelman,et al.  Preschooler's Ability to Decide Whether a Photographed Unfamiliar Object Can Move Itself. , 1988 .

[47]  L. Weiskrantz,et al.  Thought Without Language , 1988 .

[48]  Alan Slater Visual memory and perception in early infancy. , 1989 .

[49]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Priorities in children's expectations about object label reference: form over color. , 1989, Child development.

[50]  D. Premack The infant's theory of self-propelled objects , 1990, Cognition.

[51]  R. Gelman First Principles Organize Attention to and Learning About Relevant Data: Number and the Animate‐Inanimate Distinction as Examples , 1990 .

[52]  L. Cohen,et al.  Infant perception of a causal event , 1990 .

[53]  S. Gelman,et al.  The importance of knowing a dodo is a bird: Categories and infer - ences in two - year olds , 1990 .

[54]  John A. Bargh,et al.  Goal $ Intent: Goal-Directed Thought and Behavior Are Often Unintentional , 1990 .

[55]  Rochel Gelman,et al.  First Principles Organize Attention to and Learning About Relevant Data: Number and the Animate-Inanimate Distinction as Examples , 1990, Cogn. Sci..

[56]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Infants' contribution to the achievement of joint reference. , 1991, Child development.

[57]  F. Keil,et al.  Early differentiation of causal mechanisms appropriate to biological and nonbiological kinds. , 1991, Child development.

[58]  Mark H. Johnson,et al.  CONSPEC and CONLERN: a two-process theory of infant face recognition. , 1991, Psychological review.

[59]  E. Spelke,et al.  Ontological categories guide young children's inductions of word meaning: Object terms and substance terms , 1991, Cognition.

[60]  J. Mandler,et al.  Separating the sheep from the goats: Differentiating global categories , 1991, Cognitive Psychology.

[61]  J. Mandler How to build a baby: II. Conceptual primitives. , 1992, Psychological review.

[62]  L. Camaioni Mind knowledge in infancy: The emergence of intentional communication , 1992 .

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

[64]  Marshall M. Haith,et al.  The formation of expectations in early infancy , 1993 .

[65]  J. Mandler,et al.  Concept formation in infancy , 1993 .

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

[67]  D. Muir,et al.  Social competence and person-object differentiation: An analysis of the still-face effect. , 1993 .

[68]  B. Younger,et al.  Understanding category members as "the same sort of thing": explicit categorization in ten-month infants. , 1993, Child development.

[69]  S. Gelman,et al.  Preschoolers' Ability to Distinguish Living Kinds as a Function of Regrowth , 1993 .

[70]  Kelly L. Madole,et al.  Developmental changes in infants' attention to function and form-function correlations , 1993 .

[71]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Early referential understanding: Infants' ability to recognize referential acts for what they are. , 1993 .

[72]  Chris Moore,et al.  Children's theories of mind: Mental states and social understanding. , 1993 .

[73]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  The place of perception in children's concepts ☆ , 1993 .

[74]  L. Cohen,et al.  How infants perceive a simple causal event , 1993 .

[75]  P. D. Eimas,et al.  Studies on the formation of perceptually based basic-level categories in young infants. , 1994, Child development.

[76]  Charlie Lewis,et al.  Children's Early Understanding of Mind: Origins and Development , 1994 .

[77]  A. Leslie Mapping the mind: ToMM, ToBY, and Agency: Core architecture and domain specificity , 1994 .

[78]  L. Bahrick The Development of Infants' Sensitivity to Arbitrary Intermodal Relations , 1994 .

[79]  Myrna F. Schwartz,et al.  Of cabbages and things: Semantic memory from a neuropsychological perspective—A tutorial review. , 1994 .

[80]  M. Legerstee Patterns of 4‐month‐old infant responses to hidden silent and sounding people and objects , 1994 .

[81]  Albert Yonas,et al.  Effects of luminance and texture motion on infant defensive reactions to optical collision , 1994 .

[82]  S. Baron-Cohen,et al.  Understanding other minds : perspectives from autism , 1994 .

[83]  D. Poulin-Dubois,et al.  Movement and Children's Attributions of Life Properties , 1994 .

[84]  Peter D. Eimas,et al.  Categorization in early infancy and the continuity of development , 1994, Cognition.

[85]  S. Gelman,et al.  Mapping the Mind: Domain Specificity In Cognition And Culture , 1994 .

[86]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Understanding the link between joint attention and language. , 1995 .

[87]  L. Bahrick Chapter 17 – Intermodal Origins of Self-Perception , 1995 .

[88]  Leslie B. Cohen,et al.  The Role of Object Parts in Infants' Attention to Form-Function Correlations. , 1995 .

[89]  Frank C. Keil,et al.  An abstract to concrete shift in the development of biological thought: the insides story , 1995, Cognition.

[90]  C. Moore,et al.  Joint attention : its origins and role in development , 1995 .

[91]  L. Kaufman,et al.  Distinguishing Between Animates And Inanimates: Not By Motion Alone , 1995 .

[92]  J M Mandler,et al.  Long-term recall of event sequences in infancy. , 1995, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[93]  A. Meltzoff Understanding the Intentions of Others: Re-Enactment of Intended Acts by 18-Month-Old Children. , 1995, Developmental psychology.

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

[95]  M. Tomasello Joint attention as social cognition. , 1995 .

[96]  Philippe Rochat,et al.  The self in infancy: Theory and research. , 1995 .

[97]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  A Dynamic Systems Approach to the Development of Cognition and Action , 2007, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[98]  Carl E. Granrud,et al.  Visual perception and cognition in infancy , 1995 .

[99]  Susan Carey,et al.  On the origin of causal understanding. , 1995 .

[100]  J. Hodges,et al.  Charting the progression in semantic dementia: implications for the organisation of semantic memory. , 1995 .

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

[102]  J. Hodges,et al.  Charting the progression in semantic dementia: implications for the organisation of semantic memory. , 1995, Memory.

[103]  Z. Nadasdy,et al.  Taking the intentional stance at 12 months of age , 1995, Cognition.

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

[105]  Lisa M. Oakes,et al.  Infant causal perception , 1995 .

[106]  Alan C. Evans,et al.  Specific Involvement of Human Parietal Systems and the Amygdala in the Perception of Biological Motion , 1996, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[107]  J. Mandler,et al.  Drinking and driving don't mix: inductive generalization in infancy , 1996, Cognition.

[108]  The animate-inanimate distinction in infancy: Sensitivity to distinctions between social interactions and object manipulations , 1996 .

[109]  D. Olson,et al.  The Handbook of education and human development : new models of learning, teaching, and schooling , 1996 .

[110]  S. Bondy [14] - Evaluation of Free Radical-Initiated Oxidant Events within the Nervous System , 1996 .

[111]  Josef P. Rauschecker,et al.  The Development of Intersensory Perception: Comparative Perspectives , 1996, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[112]  Diane Poulin-Dubois,et al.  Infants' concept of animacy. , 1996 .

[113]  Marguerite Hoerger,et al.  The perceptual foundations of categorization in infancy , 1996 .

[114]  M. Tomasello,et al.  Eighteen-month-old children learn words in non-ostensive contexts , 1996, Journal of Child Language.

[115]  Developmental Accounts of Intentionality: Toward Integration , 1996, Developmental review : DR.

[116]  P. Quinn,et al.  A Reexamination of the Perceptual-to-Conceptual Shift in Mental Representations , 1997 .

[117]  K. Inagaki Emerging distinctions between na?ve biology and na?ve psychology , 1997 .

[118]  D. Kuhn,et al.  Cognition, Perception, and Language , 1997 .

[119]  J. G. Bremner,et al.  Infant Development: Recent Advances , 1997 .

[120]  J. Shinskey,et al.  Interpreting infant looking: the event set x event set design. , 1997, Developmental psychology.

[121]  James L. McClelland,et al.  Rethinking infant knowledge: toward an adaptive process account of successes and failures in object permanence tasks. , 1997, Psychological review.

[122]  H. Wellman,et al.  The Emergence of core domains of thought : children's reasoning about physical, psychological, and biological phenomena , 1997 .

[123]  P. Rochat,et al.  Young infants' sensitivity to movement information specifying social causality , 1997 .

[124]  S. Baron-Cohen Mindblindness: An Essay on Autism and Theory of Mind , 1997 .

[125]  M. Casasola,et al.  Acquisition of word-object associations by 14-month-old infants. , 1998, Developmental psychology.

[126]  David R. Olson,et al.  The Handbook of Education and Human Development , 1998 .

[127]  M. Tomasello,et al.  Fourteen-through 18-month-old infants di eren-tially imitate intentional and accidental actions , 1998 .

[128]  G. Butterworth,et al.  Infants' use of object parts in early categorization , 1998 .

[129]  Willis F. Overton,et al.  How to Grow a Baby: A Reevaluation of Image-Schema and Piagetian Action Approaches to Representation , 1998, Human Development.

[130]  G. Butterworth,et al.  Infants' attention to object structure in early categorization. , 1998, Developmental psychology.

[131]  P. Rochat,et al.  Are young infants sensitive to interpersonal contingency , 1998 .

[132]  Robert L. Goldstone,et al.  Definition , 1960, A Philosopher Looks at Sport.

[133]  S. Carey,et al.  Whose gaze will infants follow? The elicitation of gaze-following in 12-month-olds , 1998 .

[134]  The perception of social causality by 3- to 9-month-old infants , 1998 .

[135]  J. Mandler,et al.  Studies in Inductive Inference in Infancy , 1998, Cognitive Psychology.

[136]  L. Gogate,et al.  Intersensory redundancy facilitates learning of arbitrary relations between vowel sounds and objects in seven-month-old infants. , 1998, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[137]  G. Butterworth,et al.  Infants' use of object parts in early categorization. , 1998, Developmental psychology.

[138]  J. Mandler,et al.  On developing a knowledge base in infancy. , 1998, Developmental psychology.

[139]  A. Woodward Infants selectively encode the goal object of an actor's reach , 1998, Cognition.

[140]  A. Schlottmann,et al.  Do 9-Month-Olds Perceive Causation-at-a-Distance? , 1999, Perception.

[141]  P. Rochat Early Social Cognition : Understanding Others in the First Months of Life , 1999 .

[142]  L. Cohen,et al.  Infants’ Use of Functional Parts in Basic-like Categorization , 1999 .

[143]  D. Poulin-Dubois,et al.  Infants' reliance on shape to generalize novel labels to animate and inanimate objects , 1999, Journal of Child Language.

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

[145]  Elizabeth K. Johnson,et al.  Statistical learning of tone sequences by human infants and adults , 1999, Cognition.

[146]  P. Rochat,et al.  Social–cognitive development in the first year. , 1999 .

[147]  J. Watson,et al.  Early socio–emotional development: Contingency perception and the social-biofeedback model. , 1999 .

[148]  Lisa M. Oakes,et al.  Making Sense of Infant Categorization: Stable Processes and Changing Representations☆☆☆ , 1999 .

[149]  G. Csibra,et al.  Goal attribution without agency cues: the perception of ‘pure reason’ in infancy , 1999, Cognition.

[150]  David R. Olson,et al.  Developing theories of intention : social understanding and self-control , 1999 .

[151]  M. Tomasello Social cognition before the revolution , 1999 .

[152]  A. Woodward Infants' ability to distinguish between purposeful and non-purposeful behaviors , 1999 .

[153]  G. Hatano,et al.  A developmental perspective on informal biology , 1999 .

[154]  J. Nadel,et al.  Expectancies for social contingency in 2‐month‐olds , 1999 .

[155]  C. Frith,et al.  Movement and Mind: A Functional Imaging Study of Perception and Interpretation of Complex Intentional Movement Patterns , 2000, NeuroImage.

[156]  J. Sommerville,et al.  Twelve-Month-Old Infants Interpret Action in Context , 2000, Psychological science.

[157]  Understanding Early Categorization: One Process or Two? , 2000, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[158]  J. Mandler Perceptual and Conceptual Processes in Infancy , 2000 .

[159]  D. Rakison When a Rose Is Just a Rose: The Illusion of Taxonomies in Infant Categorization. , 2000, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[160]  J. J. Guajardo,et al.  How infants make sense of intentional action , 2001 .