18 research outputs found

    Sharing culture in a tech world: Grandparentā€“grandchild cultural exchanges over video chat.

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    Grandparents who were separated from their infant grandchildren during COVID-19 sought other ways to connect, including video chat. Video chat supports learning, and its features (e.g., contingent responsiveness) may allow for cultural exchange. However, technological problems may disrupt these exchanges. In a semi-naturalistic, longitudinal study, 47 families submitted up to three video chats and surveys. Families were predominantly White/Caucasian, highly-educated, and lived between 1 and 2700 miles apart. Multilevel models were used to predict the proportion of the sessions devoted to exchanging culture (e.g., holidays, parenting advice) and managing tech problems. Culture exchange did not change as a function of infant age, video chat experience, or when encountering tech problems. Although only marginally statistically significant, culture exchange increased as distance increased. Tech problems changed as a function of tech talk. A qualitative analysis revealed that cultural transmission occurred via a culture of care and sharing of information across video chat, that families adapted their behaviors to the new technology, and that technology disruptions rarely interfered with the flow of information. These findings demonstrate the ability to share culture when physically separated and in the presence of tech disruptions. Further, this study supports previous work on the emerging culture of video chat. Families adapted to being separated, and grandparents and infants successfully communicated through a new modality. Because video chat supports family relationships, equitable access to high-speed internet should be a priority to enable more families to use it

    Accessing the Inaccessible: Redefining Play as a Spectrum

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    Defining play has plagued researchers and philosophers for years. From describing play as an inaccessible concept due to its complexity, to providing checklists of features, the field has struggled with how to conceptualize and operationalize ā€œplay.ā€ This theoretical piece reviews the literature about both play and learning and suggests that by viewing play as a spectrum ā€“ that ranges from free play (no guidance or support) to guided play and games (including purposeful adult support while maintaining playful elements), we better capture the true essence of play and explain its relationship to learning. Insights from the Science of Learning allow us to better understand why play supports learning across social and academic domains. By changing the lens through which we conceptualize play, we account for previous findings in a cohesive way while also proposing new avenues of exploration for the field to study the role of learning through play across age and context

    Accessing the Inaccessible: Redefining Play as a Spectrum.

    Get PDF
    Defining play has plagued researchers and philosophers for years. From describing play as an inaccessible concept due to its complexity, to providing checklists of features, the field has struggled with how to conceptualize and operationalize "play." This theoretical piece reviews the literature about both play and learning and suggests that by viewing play as a spectrum - that ranges from free play (no guidance or support) to guided play and games (including purposeful adult support while maintaining playful elements), we better capture the true essence of play and explain its relationship to learning. Insights from the Science of Learning allow us to better understand why play supports learning across social and academic domains. By changing the lens through which we conceptualize play, we account for previous findings in a cohesive way while also proposing new avenues of exploration for the field to study the role of learning through play across age and context

    The Novel Object and Unusual Name (NOUN) database: a collection of novel images for use in experimental research

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    Many experimental research designs require images of novel objects. Here we introduce the Novel Object and Unusual Name (NOUN) Database. This database contains 64 primary novel object images and additional novel exemplars for ten basic- and nine global-level object categories. The objectsā€™ novelty was confirmed by both self-report and a lack of consensus on questions that required participants to name and identify the objects. We also found that object novelty correlated with qualifying naming responses pertaining to the objectsā€™ colors. Results from a similarity sorting task (and subsequent multidimensional scaling analysis on the similarity ratings) demonstrated that the objects are complex and distinct entities that vary along several featural dimensions beyond simply shape and color. A final experiment confirmed that additional item exemplars comprise both sub- and superordinate categories. These images may be useful in a variety of settings, particularly for developmental psychology and other research in language, categorization, perception, visual memory and related domains

    Deformation of perceived shape with multiple illumination sources

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    Lights, camera, action! An interaction between illumination and viewpoint change in object recognition

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    J EAN

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    Wrong beginnings: our response to a bold report

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    At the end of November 2017, Ofsted, under its new Chief Inspector Amanda Spielman, issued a report on practice in Reception classrooms. The report, titled ā€˜Bold Beginningsā€™ has marked a sudden and surprising shift in Ofstedā€™s views on the nature of good practice in early childhood education. In consequence, it has sparked widespread controversy and condemnation, with many early years teachers, Headteachers and researchers criticising the report for its uncritical support for current government dogma and its ignorance of the wealth of scientific evidence on learning in young children. These responses from the early years community included a damning response from TACTYC, the Association for Professional Development in Early Years entitled ā€˜Bald Beginningsā€™ .In this article we want to set out some of the scientific evidence which causes concern in relation to the direction of travel of recent government early years policy, and specifically that stated and implied in this Ofsted report
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