Relational information processing of novel unrelated actions by infants.

Infant Behav Dev

Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Department of Developmental Psychology, Georg-Voigt-Str. 8, D-60054 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

Published: January 2006

Declarative memory in infants is often assessed via deferred imitation. Not much is known about the information processing basis of the memory effect found in these experiments. While in the typical deferred imitation study the order of actions remains the same during demonstration and retrieval, in two experiments with n=30 respective n=25, 10- and 11-month-old infants, the order of novel unrelated actions in demonstration and retrieval was varied (same, reversed, mixed). This allowed a separation of item-specific from item-relational information processing. In both experiments best memory performance was found when the order of target actions remained the same during encoding and recall, demonstrating that infants seem to rely on item-specific as well as item-relational information which has to be ad hoc constructed while encoding.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2005.07.005DOI Listing

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