Making Sense of the World: Infant Learning From a Predictive Processing Perspective

Moritz Köster, Ezgi Kayhan, Miriam Langeloh, Stefanie Hoehl

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

For human infants, the first years after birth are a period of intense exploration-getting to understand their own competencies in interaction with a complex physical and social environment. In contemporary neuroscience, the predictive-processing framework has been proposed as a general working principle of the human brain, the optimization of predictions about the consequences of one's own actions, and sensory inputs from the environment. However, the predictive-processing framework has rarely been applied to infancy research. We argue that a predictive-processing framework may provide a unifying perspective on several phenomena of infant development and learning that may seem unrelated at first sight. These phenomena include statistical learning principles, infants' motor and proprioceptive learning, and infants' basic understanding of their physical and social environment. We discuss how a predictive-processing perspective can advance the understanding of infants' early learning processes in theory, research, and application.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)562-571
Number of pages10
JournalPerspectives on Psychological Science
Volume15
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2020

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 501005 Developmental psychology

Keywords

  • BEHAVIOR
  • BRAIN
  • CREATIVITY
  • FUTURE
  • MINDS
  • MODELS
  • PERCEPTION
  • PRECISE
  • UNCERTAINTY
  • cognition
  • infant development
  • neuroscience
  • perception
  • social cognition

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