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Theories Of Cognition And Cognitive Abilities

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Beginning in the 1980’s, Spelke began development on her theory known as the ‘core knowledge’ theory. It was proposed that infants have the foundations for a number of cognitive abilities that develop into far more complex cognitive abilities as they age. Amongst others, these abilities include the knowledge of object representation, a concept of differences in the amount of something, and their spatial surroundings. Spelke suggested that these processes are innate, therefore present from birth, and domain specific, therefore meaning that these different structures of cognition are independent of each other. Contrary to what Piaget suggested, Spelke theorised that children are far more cognitively adept in regards to simple cognitive tasks and that these cognitive abilities are improved as the infant learns (Carey & Spelke, 1994).Throughout this paper, some aspects of cognition will be examined as well as evaluated.

An infant’s understanding of object permanence, or the understanding that an object exists even when it is not clearly viewable, was one of Spelke’s first suggestions. Evidence for this claim is offered by Kellman & Spelke (1983) who suggest that infants as young as three months old have an understanding of object permanence. In one experiment, they wanted to test whether infants would habituate, meaning to look longer at, a broken rod which had its centre partly hidden, and was moving irregularly, after observing a rod that moved as a single unit; this is

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