Volume 17, Issue 4 p. 623-644

New findings on object permanence: A developmental difference between two types of occlusion

M. Keith Moore

Corresponding Author

M. Keith Moore

University of Washington, USA

Centre on Human Development and Disability, Box 357920, University of Washington, WA 98195, USA.Search for more papers by this author
Andrew N. Meltzoff

Corresponding Author

Andrew N. Meltzoff

University of Washington, USA

Centre on Human Development and Disability, Box 357920, University of Washington, WA 98195, USA.Search for more papers by this author
First published: 23 December 2010
Citations: 16

Abstract

Manual search for totally occluded objects was investigated in 10-, 12- and 14-month old infants. Infants responded to two types of total hiding in different ways, supporting the inference that object permanence is not a once-and-for-all attainment. Occlusion of an object by movement of a screen over it was solved at an earlier age than occlusion in which an object was carried under the screen. This dissociation was not explained by motivation, motor skill or means-ends coordination, because for both tasks the same object was hidden in the same place under the same screen and required the same uncovering response. This dissociation generalized across an experimentally manipulated change in recovery means-infants removed cloths while seated at a table in Expt 1 and were required to crawl through 3-D space to displace semi-rigid pillows in Expt 2. Further analysis revealed that emotional response varied as a function of hiding, suggesting an affective correlate of infant cognition. There are four empirical findings to account for: developmental change, task dissociation, generalization of the effects across recovery means, and emotional reactions. An identity-development theory is proposed explaining these findings in terms of infants’ understanding of object identity and the developmental relationship between object identity and object permanence. Object identity is seen as a necessary precursor to the development of object permanence.