Infant Contingency Learning in Different Cultural Contexts

Autor(en): Graf, Frauke
Lamm, Bettina
Goertz, Claudia
Kolling, Thorsten
Freitag, Claudia
Spangler, Sibylle
Fassbender, Ina
Teubert, Manuel
Vierhaus, Marc
Keller, Heidi
Lohaus, Arnold
Schwarzer, Gudrun
Knopf, Monika
Stichwörter: baseline activity; CAMEROONIAN NSO; contingency learning; cultural differences; ETHNOTHEORIES; EXPERIENCES; FULL-TERM; gross motor development; KICKING; LONG-TERM-MEMORY; mobile task; PRETERM; Psychology; Psychology, Developmental; RECOGNITION; TEMPERAMENT
Erscheinungsdatum: 2012
Herausgeber: WILEY
Journal: INFANT AND CHILD DEVELOPMENT
Volumen: 21
Ausgabe: 5
Startseite: 458
Seitenende: 473
Zusammenfassung: 
Three-month-old Cameroonian Nso farmer and German middle-class infants were compared regarding learning and retention in a computerized mobile task. Infants achieving a preset learning criterion during reinforcement were tested for immediate and long-term retention measured in terms of an increased response rate after reinforcement and after a 24-h delay compared with baseline. It was hypothesized that infants from both cultural communities would acquire the contingency between own motion and mobile movement, as they similarly experience contingent responses in social interactions. Nso infants were assumed to show a higher learning rate related to their advanced gross motor development, whereas German infants were expected to show a higher baseline because of culture-typical motor handling promoting a high level of activity (i.e. lying supine). Results showed immediate and long-term retention in infants from both cultural contexts, as well as a higher baseline for German infants. Although the learning rate was higher for Cameroonian infants, logistic regression revealed that learning was not related to gross motor development but depended on the level of baseline response. Thus, contingency learning was shown in different cultural environments, and the level of baseline activity coined by culture-specific motor handling turned out to influence learning within the mobile task. Copyright (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
DOI: 10.1002/icd.1755

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