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Wiley InterScience

Child Development

Child Development

Volume 77 Issue 3, Pages 786 - 799

Published Online: 9 May 2006

Journal Compilation © 2010 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.



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Young Children's Use of Video as a Source of Socially Relevant Information
Georgene L. Troseth 1 , Megan M. Saylor 1 , and Allison H. Archer 1
  1 Vanderbilt University
 Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Georgene Troseth, Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37203-5721. Electronic mail may be sent to georgene.troseth@vanderbilt.edu.

 This research was supported by Peabody College of Vanderbilt University and by NICHD grants to the first author (HD-044751) and to the Kennedy Center of Vanderbilt University (P30-HD-15052). We thank Kara Johnson, Jami Peterson, Jennifer Behnke, Brian Verdine, and Matt Loftus for help in data collection; Tim Laurence for library and reference assistance; Amy Crawford, Missy Grahn, Jenny Schiwinger, and Kate Hilton for coding and scheduling; and Rose Vick for her many contributions to this research.

Copyright © 2006 by the Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.

ABSTRACT

Although prior research clearly shows that toddlers have difficulty learning from video, the basis for their difficulty is unknown. In the 2 current experiments, the effect of social feedback on 2-year-olds' use of information from video was assessed. Children who were told "face to face" where to find a hidden toy typically found it, but children who were given the same information by a person on video did not. Children who engaged in a 5-min contingent interaction with a person (including social cues and personal references) through closed-circuit video before the hiding task used information provided to find the toy. These findings have important implications for educational television and use of video stimuli in laboratory-based research with young children.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00903.x About DOI

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