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Infant reaching and grasping: Frameworks for testing developmental cascades.

Eliza L Nelson1, Caroline Danforth2, Amy W Needham2

  • 1Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.

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Early infant experiences shape reaching and grasping skills through developmental cascades. Research highlights how micro and macro analyses reveal distinct developmental trajectories and downstream effects.

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Developmental cascadesGraspingHandednessReachingSticky mittens

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Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Motor Development
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • Infant reaching and grasping are crucial for cognitive and motor development.
  • Understanding developmental cascades is key to explaining how early experiences influence later skills.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review discoveries in infant reaching and grasping from 2000-2025.
  • To highlight novel research approaches investigating developmental cascades.
  • To outline future research directions for understanding developmental influences.

Main Methods:

  • Review of research employing the 'sticky mittens' paradigm for micro-level analysis.
  • Analysis of infant handedness studies for macro-level trajectory identification.
  • Examination of developmental cascades through different levels of analysis.

Main Results:

  • Early experiences significantly impact the development of reaching and grasping skills.
  • Micro-level analysis (e.g., sticky mittens) dissects components of developmental change.
  • Macro-level analysis (e.g., handedness) reveals diverse developmental trajectories over time.

Conclusions:

  • Developmental cascades can be studied at various analytical levels.
  • Methodological and conceptual decisions in infancy research have broad implications.
  • Future research should focus on mechanistic questions regarding experience-dependent development.