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An Experiment by Joseph Campos: The Visual Cliff

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    [Campos] Emotion is a nonverbal language.
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    [woman] Is your tummy ticklish?
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    [Campos] Emotions reveal the cognition,
    the understanding of the baby.
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    And, furthermore,
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    emotions are the nonverbal communication
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    of the baby towards the parent,
    and the parent towards the baby.
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    Therefore, I thought that emotions
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    were a royal road—
    one royal road—
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    to the study
    of the baby's development.
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    [narrator] In this study,
    babies between 9 and 12 months
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    are brought into the lab and placed
    on a large, plexiglass top table.
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    Half of the table
    has a checkerboard pattern,
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    just underneath the surface.
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    But halfway across is a visual cliff,
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    which the baby can tell
    drops off steeply.
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    The plexiglass top continues,
    so it's perfectly fine to proceed.
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    But the baby isn't so sure,
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    and this is a big drop
    for a baby just starting to crawl.
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    She wants to get across
    to get the toy,
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    but she's cautious, and looks
    to the opposite end of the table
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    where her mother is.
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    The parent is instructed to smile
    or make a fear face.
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    If the mother is posing a fear face,
    the baby typically does not cross
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    this stair step downward,
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    this modified visual cliff
    or visual step.
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    On the other hand,
    if the mother poses a smile,
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    or somehow poses
    a nonverbal communication
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    that is not prohibitive,
    but encouraging,
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    the child is much more likely
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    to cross over to her.
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    This particular study demonstrates
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    the role of nonverbal communication
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    in determining the child's
    behavior in uncertain context.
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    A baby will, when they encounter
    something ambiguous, something uncertain,
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    will typically look
    to the significant other—
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    the mother, the father,
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    a grandparent, the caregiver—
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    in order to figure out what to do.
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    So, by 11-12 months of age,
    the baby is already doing
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    what all of us do
    when something unusual happens.
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    We look around to figure out
    how other people are reacting.
Title:
An Experiment by Joseph Campos: The Visual Cliff
Description:

Check out this video from Volume 3 of the 3 volume vook, Mind in the Making - The Essential Life Skills Every Child Needs, by Ellen Galinsky. To see more, visit vook.com!

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
02:36

English subtitles

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