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1.
Front Psychol ; 12: 763436, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34880813

ABSTRACT

Geometrically arranged spots and crosshatched incised lines are frequently portrayed in prehistoric cave and mobiliary art. Two experiments examined the saliency of snake scales and leopard rosettes to infants that are perceptually analogous to these patterns. Experiment 1 examined the investigative behavior of 23 infants at three daycare facilities. Four plastic jars (15×14.5cm) with snake scales, leopard rosettes, geometric plaid, and plain patterns printed on yellowish-orange paper inside were placed individually on the floor on separate days during playtime. Fourteen 7-15-month-old infants approached each jar hesitantly and poked it before handling it for five times, the criterion selected for statistical analyses of poking frequency. The jars with snake scales and leopard rosettes yielded reliably higher poking frequencies than the geometric plaid and plain jars. The second experiment examined the gaze and grasping behavior of 15 infants (spanning 5months of age) seated on the laps of their mothers in front of a table. For paired comparisons, the experimenter pushed two of four upright plastic cylinders (13.5×5.5cm) with virtually the same colored patterns simultaneously toward each infant for 6s. Video recordings indicated that infants gazed significantly longer at the cylinders with snake scales and leopard rosettes than the geometric plaid and plain cylinders prior to grasping them. Logistic regression of gaze duration predicting cylinder choice for grasping indicated that seven of 24 paired comparisons were not significant, all of which involved choices of cylinders with snake scales and leopard rosettes that diverted attention before reaching. Evidence that these biological patterns are salient to infants during an early period of brain development might characterize the integration of subcortical and neocortical visual processes known to be involved in snake recognition. In older individuals, memorable encounters with snakes and leopards coupled with the saliency of snake scales and leopard rosettes possibly biased artistic renditions of similar patterns during prehistoric times.

2.
Hist Psychol ; 21(2): 172-175, 2018 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29745696

ABSTRACT

Presents a piece of poetry by A. A. Milne who is now best known as the author of the Winnie the Pooh (1926) book but was quite well reputed before its publication for his plays and his poetry, including collections such as When We Were Very Young (1924). The style of "Veridical Perception" will be familiar to any who have read his work. (PsycINFO Database Record

3.
Behav Brain Sci ; 35(6): 429-30, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23164304

ABSTRACT

Our research on non-religion supports the proposed shift toward more interactive models of prejudice. Being nonreligious is easily hideable and, increasingly, of low salience, leading to experiences not easily understood via traditional or contemporary frameworks for studying prejudice and prejudice reduction. This context affords new opportunity to observe reverse forms of interactive prejudice, which can interfere with prejudice reduction.


Subject(s)
Group Processes , Interpersonal Relations , Prejudice , Social Identification , Humans
4.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 46(2): 249-58, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21809179

ABSTRACT

What form would an ideal merger of ecological and social psychology take? Is that ideal attainable? Many researchers and theorists are working to answer these questions. Charles (2009, 2011a) offered insights from E. B. Holt, one of James J. Gibson's mentors, who argued that minds-mental kinds, processes, states, etc.-are observable aspects of the environment. Phrasing that in Ecological terms, the minds of other organisms are specified in the structure of ambient energy extended over time and space; they are directly perceivable by a properly attuned organism. Ecological Psychology enhances Holt's story, by brining to the table a sophisticated theory of direct perception; Holt enhances the Ecological story by brining to the table a sophisticated theory about the nature of minds. The two combine to form the long-sought ideal merger. Thus, I claimed, Ecological Psychology will either rediscover its roots, or go through the trouble of re-creating them. This paper further develops those ideas, by presenting a simpler version of the argument, suggesting easy ways of dismissing that argument, and addressing the concerns expressed by Castro and Lafuente (2011).


Subject(s)
Ecology/trends , Psychology, Social/trends , Psychology/trends , Environment , Logic , Perception/physiology , Psychological Theory , Social Behavior
5.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 45(1): 132-53, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20440585

ABSTRACT

What is the greatest contribution that ecological psychologists can offer social psychology? Ideally, ecological psychologists could explain how people directly perceive the unique properties of their social partners. But social partners are distinguished from mundane objects because they possess mental traits, and tradition tells us that minds cannot be seen. When considering the ideal possibility, we reject that doctrine and posit minds as perceivable. For ecological psychology, this entails asserting that minds are the types of things able to structure ambient energy. Contemporary research and theory suggests distinctly ecological ways of attacking this problem, but the problem is not new. Almost 100 years ago, Holt argued for the visibility of minds. Thus when considering these ideas, ecological psychologists face a choice that is at once about their future and their past. Extending ecological psychology's first principles into the social realm, we come to the point where we must either accept or reject Holt's arguments, and the wider context they bring. In doing so, we accept or reject our ability to study the uniquely social.


Subject(s)
Ecology , Psychology, Social , Psychology , Boxing/psychology , Humans , Intention , Martial Arts/psychology , Perception/physiology , Philosophy , Psychological Theory , Social Environment , Social Perception
6.
Dev Sci ; 12(6): 991-1006, 2009 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19840053

ABSTRACT

Piaget proposed that understanding permanency, understanding occlusion events, and forming mental representations were synonymous; however, accumulating evidence indicates that those concepts are not unified in development. Infants reach for endarkened objects at younger ages than for occluded objects, and infants' looking patterns suggest that they expect occluded objects to reappear at younger ages than they reach for them. We reaffirm the latter finding in 5- to 6-month-olds and find similar responses to faded objects, but we fail to find that pattern in response to endarkened objects. This suggests that looking behavior and reaching behavior are both sensitive to method of disappearance, but with opposite effects. Current cognition-oriented (i.e. representation-oriented) explanations of looking behavior cannot easily accommodate these results; neither can perceptual-preference explanations, nor the traditional ecological reinterpretations of object permanence. A revised ecological hypothesis, invoking affordance learning, suggests how these differences could arise developmentally.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Concept Formation/physiology , Infant Behavior/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Cognition , Female , Humans , Infant , Male
7.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 43(1): 53-66, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18758875

ABSTRACT

As Ecological Psychology pushes into new areas, success will be made easier by a rediscovery its theoretical history, in particular the "New Realism", lead in part by E. B. Holt. Three New Realists tenants seem particularly relevant: (1) we experience reality, (2) relations are real, and (3) things are what you see when you see those things. Though the two groups differ in terms of their conception of perception, and what can be perceived, their conceptions are related in very insightful ways. Further, the comparison reemphasizes the extent of unique empirical claims ecological psychologists make, and grounds those claims within a larger framework for psychology as a whole. This makes obvious the need for further work on the mathematics of invariants, the physiological mechanisms of information extraction, and the behaviors of perception.


Subject(s)
Ecology , Psychological Theory , Psychology/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , United States
8.
Infancy ; 14(5): 563-578, 2009 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32693535

ABSTRACT

A number of studies have investigated infants' abilities to extract and discriminate number from multimodal events. These results have been mixed for several possible reasons, including aspects of the experimental design that provide perceptual cues that are unrelated to number, and are known to influence looking preferences. This experiment used a preferential looking paradigm to investigate whether 6- to 9-month-old infants can extract the amodal property of number from an arbitrarily related multimodal event sequence when nonnumerical confounds are removed. Results demonstrate that female infants discriminate number from a multimodal presentation by 6 months, whereas males do so by 8 months. Further, the study underscores the importance of controlling for low-level perceptual cues in looking time experiments aimed at examining infants' cognitive abilities.

9.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 42(2): 194-9, 2008 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18491200

ABSTRACT

Advocates of many different approaches have, for years, attempted to usurp cognitive psychology's dominance in the field of psychology. Unfortunately, none of these approaches have yet made a convincing case that they could take cognitive psychology's place. Because of its explicit use of the mind-as-computer model, cognitivism gains a false sense of concreteness, and becomes pragmatically useful. Because their models are implicit, alternatives, such as phenomenology, gain a false sense of ambiguity and lose their pragmatic potential. In addition, alternative theories often alienate potential sympathizers through unnecessarily harsh criticism. This leads to a professional attitude in which one must take sides, rather than an attitude that appreciates the benefits of diversity, and may lead to the emergence of other beneficial models. If alternative approaches, such as Dr. Flores-González's (Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Sciences, 2008), could push through to the point of immediate usefulness, and present themselves in a less adversarial way, they would be much better placed make meaningful contributions.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Neural Networks, Computer , Cognitive Science/methods , Consciousness/physiology , Humans , Memory/physiology , Models, Theoretical , Perception/physiology
10.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 41(1): 93-6; discussion 114-9, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17992873

ABSTRACT

Takasuna (Integr. Physiol. Behav. Sci. 41, 2007) mentioned the ease with which evolutionary theory was accepted by Japanese psychologists, and certainly this is admirable. He also mentioned the stubborn force which had to be used to gain an understanding of the (thoroughly Western) subjective objective distinction. Alas, during the formative years of Japanese psychology, there was much philosophical work afoot attempting to destroy that distinction. It is speculated that only a small change of which books were translated, or with which Americans early Japanese psychologists trained under, would have made Japan into a haven for these still underdog theories.


Subject(s)
Behaviorism/history , Biological Evolution , Culture , Ethnopsychology/history , Psychology, Experimental/history , Psychology, Social/history , Empirical Research , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan , United States , World War II
11.
Psychol Methods ; 10(2): 206-26, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15998178

ABSTRACT

The correction for attenuation due to measurement error (CAME) has received many historical criticisms, most of which can be traced to the limited ability to use CAME inferentially. Past attempts to determine confidence intervals for CAME are summarized and their limitations discussed. The author suggests that inference requires confidence sets that demarcate those population parameters likely to have produced an obtained value--rather than indicating the samples likely to be produced by a given population--and that most researchers tend to confuse these 2 types of confidence sets. Three different Monte-Carlo methods are presented, each offering a different way of examining confidence sets under the new conceptualization. Exploring the implications of these approaches for CAME suggests potential consequences for other statistics.


Subject(s)
Models, Psychological , Psychology/methods , Humans , Monte Carlo Method , Sampling Studies
12.
Am J Primatol ; 50(2): 159-67, Feb. 2000.
Article in English | MedCarib | ID: med-726

ABSTRACT

The tendency for agonistic interaction to increase the probability of friendly interaction between social partners has been demonstrated across a range of Old World primates. While research on such post-conflict behaviour proceeds into an hypothesis-testing phase, new comparative information must accumulate to provide full phylogenetic perspective on primate social behaviour. Data from New World and prosimian primates are extremely limited. We studied captive squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) via post-conflict (PC) and matched control (MC) observations and analyzed results using both the PC-MC and time-rule methods. Former opponents maintaining affiliative relationships soon engaged in friendly interaction following large proportions of agonistic interactions, whereas non-affiliated individuals, including virtually all male-female pairs, reconciled conflicts rarely. Close-proximity approaching and huddling contact constituted the principal modes of post-conflict amicability. Agonistic interactions of relatively high intensity were most likely to be reconciled via physical contact. High vulnerability of Saimiri to predation may have favoured this species' strong inclination to reconcile soon after agonistic interaction. Research on free-living populations of this and other primate sepcies is needed to illuminate similarities and differences across taxa. (AU)


Subject(s)
21003 , Female , Male , Saimiri/psychology , Social Behavior , Social Dominance , Guyana , Agonistic Behavior , Aggression , Conflict, Psychological
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