This work stands against a backdrop of evidence that infants need first-person action experience to bootstrap knowledge of others' actions, and provides evidence against this view.pic.twitter.com/hQeDdvADsc
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As long as people's actions on objects results in a clear state change (e.g. the person touches a toy, and it lights up!), infants interpret these actions as goal-directed and causal. There's lots left to explore... see paper for the many questions left open by this work!pic.twitter.com/Tdmy5JAeZs
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Overall, our findings are consistent with the view that by 3 months of age, infants are predisposed to see other people as causal agents, who circumvent physical constraints in order to make things happen in the world.pic.twitter.com/vuV9BGYX0s
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Super proud of this work, which took us 5 years to complete and includes a pre-registered direct replication! With
@neonblueneon and Elizabeth Spelke.Prikaži ovu nit -
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That actor looks familiar
Hvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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This is awesome. I'm a philosopher and I've always preferred the Hume of innateness & habit to the Hume of constant conjunction phenomenalism. These results I would suggest help to confirm the evolutionary epistemology approach to causal perception and judgment.
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