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    Infants Grasp Gravity with Innate Sense of Physics

    Infants as young as 2 months old already have basic knowledge of "intuitive physics," researchers report in a new study.

    Most studies into infant cognition employ eye-tracking technology — psychologists can tease out what an infant is thinking and what she considers to be unexpected by following her gaze in different scenarios. This method, called violation of expectation, involves showing babies photos, videos or events that proceed as expected, followed by others that break everyday rules. If the infant understands the implicit rules, he or she will show little interest in an expected situation, but will stare at images of a surprising event.

    But at what point in their development do babies begin to understand how the physical world works?

    "We believe that infants are born with expectations about the objects around them, even though that knowledge is a skill that's never been taught," Kristy vanMarle, an assistant professor of psychological sciences at the University of Missouri, said in a statement. "As the child develops, this knowledge is refined and eventually leads to the abilities we use as adults."

    To come to this conclusion, vanMarle and her colleague, Susan Hespos, a psychologist at Northwestern University, reviewed infant cognition research conducted over the last 30 years. They found that infants already have an intuitive understanding of certain physical laws by 2 months of age, when they start to track moving objects with both eyes consistently and can be tested with eye-tracking technology.

    For instance, at this age they understand that unsupported objects will fall (gravity) and hidden objects don't cease to exist. In one test, researchers placed an object inside of a container and moved the container; 2-month-old infants knew that the hidden object moved with the container.

    This innate "physics" knowledge only grows as the infants experience their surroundings and interact more with the world. By 5 months of age, babies understand that solid objects have different properties than noncohesive substances, such as water, the researchers found.

    In a 2009 study, a research team (which included Hespos) habituated 5-month-old infants to either a blue solid or a blue liquid in a glass cup, which appeared to be the same when at rest. They tipped the glasses left and right, and poured the contents into other glasses, allowing the infants to form ideas about how the substances worked. Infants habituated to the liquid (but not the solid) weren't surprised that straws could penetrate it, but were confused when straws couldn’t penetrate the blue solid. The opposite happened with infants habituated to the solid.

    Hespos and vanMarle also learned that babies have rudimentary math abilities: Six-month-old infants can discriminate between numbers of dots (if one set held twice as many dots as the other), and 10-month-old infants can pick out which of two cups holds more liquid (if one cup held four times as much liquid as the other). Also at 10 months of age, babies will consistently choose larger amounts of food — such as crackers — in cups, though only if there are no more than three items in any cup.

    While infants appear to be born with intuitive physics knowledge, the researchers believe that parents can further assist their children in developing expectations about the world through normal interactions, such as talking, playing peek-a-boo or letting them handle various safe objects.

    "Natural interaction with the parent and objects in the world gives the child all the input that evolution has prepared the child to seek, accept and use to develop intuitive physics," vanMarle said.

    The study was published in the January issue of the journal WIREs Cognitive Science.

     

    58 comments

    • legalswashbuckler  •  Colusa, California  •  4 mths ago
      What's the surprise? Physics is only a means to explain what is natural. It does not create the natural.
      • MikeyPooh 4 mths ago
        the laws of physics create everything that is "natural".
    • Robert F  •  Bossier City, Louisiana  •  4 mths ago
      infants also grasp that we are all the same and deserving of respect and love...its only when adults start corrupting them with their own insanity and hatred that things go wrong
    • Jim_vierling  •  Holt, Michigan  •  4 mths ago
      Why if a baby has an understanding of physics at two months old, will it still crawl off the edge of something and fall when it is 6 months old?
      • Eric 4 mths ago
        Please read the article. It says after being shown these objects they learn it. So the babies would have to repeatedly see something fall to learn that it will fall.
      • Photon Wrangler 4 mths ago
        lol. Right? Maybe because while they have a basic understanding objects in the physical world, they still haven't quite grasped that they themselves are an object in the physical world. That's the final bit of self-awareness that comes later. Most animals don't get it. I think only us, dolphins and some apes do.
      • Jim_vierling 4 mths ago
        The article states that the grasp of physics is innate.

        in·nate
           [ih-neyt, in-eyt] Show IPA
        adjective
        1.
        existing in one from birth; inborn; native: innate musical talent.
        2.
        inherent in the essential character of something: an innate defect in the hypothesis.
        3.
        originating in or arising from the intellect or the constitution of the mind, rather than learned through experience: an innate knowledge of good and evil.

        The definition of innate would imply that they would not have to learn it through experience.

        The article and the study are both crap.
    • Ch  •  4 mths ago
      If you want to study gravity, just get a cat, they are always checking to see if it still works...............
    • Mars  •  4 mths ago
      You mean to tell me that when we play with a child hiding our eyes with our hands or caching their nose between our fingers the child is just humoring us.
      • Free thinker 3 mths ago
        Yeah that is about right.. Thinking the adult could be sooo silly....
    • Jorden  •  4 mths ago
      The sooner these babies learn physics the better.
      • Roland S 3 mths ago
        Yeah, mabey they can explain how gravity works.
    • Aaron  •  4 mths ago
      You blow their minds when you put your hands in front of your face and say "Peek a boo." They aren't that smart.
      • Just a soldier 4 mths ago
        The article says "infants appear to be born with intuitive physics knowledge", Not that they understand it. There is a difference between awareness and intelligence.
    • J.  •  4 mths ago
      I would like to know why they tend to lose this knowledge when they are in highschool physics? That is a much better question to answer.
    • engnr  •  King George, Virginia  •  4 mths ago
      My baby also cries when he's hungry, it's the strangest thing.
    • ♥♫♪♥MadeInAmerica♥♫♪♥  •  4 mths ago
      Chickens know this too. One of my hens likes to 'ski' down the long ramp of her coop with her feet. I gotta get this on video, it's hilarious. She does it over and over and over again like she thinks it's the funnest thing in the world to do.
    • Lester  •  4 mths ago
      Infants love playing the gravity game with grown ups.
    • JJMurray  •  3 mths ago
      So you mean they catch on to the peek-a-boo game at 2 months old? Those sneaky little #$%$ And they let us continue doing this and making fools of ourselves?
    • OuterLimits  •  4 mths ago
      Only stupid people believe knowledge is useless and that learning anything new is a waste of money.
    • Ch  •  4 mths ago
      They stand up, they fall down.......gravity in action
    • roscorojo  •  Goldthwaite, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      If we learn more and more about less and less; will we eventually know everything there is to know about nothing?
    • Eric1  •  3 mths ago
      And all this time I thought they figured that out when they fell and bumped their head....
    • Zeb  •  4 mths ago
      I wonder how these abilities fall along gender lines. Not sexist, just curious.
    • oilfieldworker  •  3 mths ago
      You don't have to be cognitive of gravity to make it work. The first time the researchers fell down, gravity was there.
    • Jennifer  •  4 mths ago
      " 10-month-old infants can pick out which of two cups holds more liquid (if one cup held four times as much liquid as the other)" So are these cups the same size, or is one cup narrower and taller than the other (that's short and wide)? Because if you've ever seen those videos of psychological studies done on kids, the kids will usually think the taller cup has more liquid, even if the experimenter poured the same amount of water from a pitcher into both the short and tall cups.
    • Mike  •  Belle, West Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      Why is this a surprise? Babies are a clean slate, physics is the explanation of everything, babies have no other option than to start learning everything. The only thing these tests can show, is that we underestimate how fast the mind can retain and process the information given to us. Now send me a check for the next 30 years of research. I just gave you the results.
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