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Newborn Imitation
The Stakes of a Controversy
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Main description:

Newborn imitation has recently become the focus of a major controversy in the human sciences. New studies have reexamined the evidence and found it wanting. Imitation has been regarded as a crucial capability of neonates ever since 1977, when two American psychologists first published experiments appearing to demonstrate that babies at birth are able to copy a variety of facial movements. The findings overturned decades of assumptions about the competence of newborns. But what if claims for newborn imitation are not true? Influential theories about the mechanisms underlying imitation, the role of mirror neurons, the nature of the self and of infant mental states, will all have to be modified or abandoned if it turns out that babies cannot imitate at birth. This Element offers a critical assessment of those theories and the stakes involved.


Contents:

Introduction; 1. Piaget before Meltzoff and Moore; 2. The primordial unity of the senses; 3. The discovery of newborn imitation; Conclusion.


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9781108826730
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: July, 2020
Pages: 75
Weight: 200g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Neuroscience

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