Título: | The emergence of eye contact as an intersubjective signal in an infant gorilla: implications for models of early social cognition : El surgimiento del contacto ocular como señal intersubjetiva en una cría de gorila: implicaciones para los modelos de cognición social temprana |
Autores: | Gómez, Juan Carlos |
Tipo de documento: | texto impreso |
Editorial: | Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia, 2012-06-09 |
Dimensiones: | application/pdf |
Nota general: |
Acción Psicológica; Vol 7, No 2 (2010): New Advances in the Study of Early Communication; 35-43 Acción Psicológica; Vol 7, No 2 (2010): New Advances in the Study of Early Communication; 35-43 2255-1271 1578-908X 10.5944/ap.7.2 Copyright (c) 2015 Facultad de Psicología. Servicio de Psicología Aplicada. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 |
Idiomas: | Inglés |
Palabras clave: | accionpsicologica:ART , driver |
Resumen: | AbstractThis paper argues against both lean and rich interpretations of early social cognition in infants and apes using as an illustration the results of a longitudinal study comparing the emergence of joint attention and tool use patterns in an infant gorilla. In contrast with tool use (where well-formed manipulations resulted in near perfect rates of reward obtention) the emergence of well-formed acts of communication with eye contact not only had no effect upon the rewards obtained, but increased the proportion of 'explicit denials' of requests. It is argued that this suggests eye contact is learned and used as an intersubjective signal of communicative intentionality and not through simple associative mechanisms of reward contingency detection. However, it is also argued that rich interpretations of early social cognition are not needed to explain the development of communicative and intersubjective intentions. |
En línea: | http://revistas.uned.es/index.php/accionpsicologica/article/view/213 |
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