A Typical 10-month-old on Piaget's A-not-B task

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 205

  • @Navak_
    @Navak_ Před 6 lety +736

    Amazing how he instantly loses track of where it is when it's out of sight. Watch him. He's so focused on it until the moment it's out of sight and then bam he instantly loses focus.

    • @svasianfilipiname6603
      @svasianfilipiname6603 Před 4 lety +2

      She's probably scared and trying to understand where she is at! No time for playing!... Cute baby though. Looks Asian/Filipina like me!

    • @unscripted483
      @unscripted483 Před 4 lety +28

      That's not what I got from this. He didnt lose focus after he lost sight of the toy, the first 2 time recognized where to look. But the subsequent attempts continued to look in the same spots that he knew the toy went before

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master Před 4 lety

      @@unscripted483 I think it is a very important observation, though.

    • @ighao6032
      @ighao6032 Před 4 lety +8

      That's actually an interesting part of babies psychology.
      I don't know the exact name, but there's a term for that
      Basically it's type of consciousness which a baby recognizes objets in their sight as existent, and out of it as non existent
      Imagine that: if you show your wallet to a baby, they will try to play around with it, BUT if you hide it for a couple of seconds, they will act like it doesn't exist anymore. Basically, what's out of their sight doesn't exist

    • @ighao6032
      @ighao6032 Před 4 lety +4

      As a consequence, it is like things disappear and appear in the world, just like magic, instead of being hide and being shown

  • @yakinwissem8665
    @yakinwissem8665 Před 4 lety +441

    Me after knowing the right side where the lion is: you FOOL!

    • @Dmm3
      @Dmm3 Před 4 lety +34

      Imagine doing this now but with a magician and it ends up being on the left. Then children watch the video of us failing the test and thinking we are idiots for not always choosing the left side.

  • @prisma.
    @prisma. Před 4 lety +155

    1:57 the face of absolute distress as he's been bamboozled twice in a row, priceless.

  • @bscutajar
    @bscutajar Před 13 lety +990

    its interesting to know that once we were all that stupid

    • @namenl2205
      @namenl2205 Před 4 lety +34

      hahahh I just wanted to comment "fuck that kid is stupid" haha

    • @hozic9929
      @hozic9929 Před 4 lety +5

      @@namenl2205 hey you stinker we all were

    • @namenl2205
      @namenl2205 Před 4 lety +5

      Hozic speak fo yo fat mom

    • @hozic9929
      @hozic9929 Před 4 lety +25

      @@namenl2205 She ain't fat doe she isn't American

    • @froskie9810
      @froskie9810 Před 4 lety +11

      8 year old comment and someone beat me to saying some still are by 45 minutes...

  • @hero9029
    @hero9029 Před 4 lety +139

    This is 10 years old so the kids around 11 now.. would be funny to see him react to this

    • @allboutthatbait4778
      @allboutthatbait4778 Před 4 lety +17

      @Tharusha Fernando what are you even saying x)

    • @Vapor817
      @Vapor817 Před 4 lety +18

      this video could've been recorded in the 90s so we have no idea how old this person is today

    • @aquarius4953
      @aquarius4953 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Vapor817 Exact.

    • @user-dc9oq2pr6v
      @user-dc9oq2pr6v Před 2 lety

      Sorry but the kid died

    • @toasteduranium
      @toasteduranium Před rokem

      Now he can have a social media account

  • @dematerializedtower
    @dematerializedtower Před rokem +25

    It is so cute that every time he hears a "thank you" he smiles

  • @Estertje93
    @Estertje93 Před 11 lety +324

    Actually, throughout the 'test' he is also compulsively looking for the lion on the tabel which is actually also an A-not-B error, and then when he sees the wooden thing he suddenly remembers, which is actually very clever :) And also he is just supercute

    • @ttimetotroll
      @ttimetotroll Před 2 lety +13

      Looking elsewhere for the toy is characteristic of a undeveloped understanding of object permanence. Infants younger than 3 months old would think that the object has vanished if their sight of the toy is blocked. With older infants, Piaget suggests that they may be able to have some ability and find the toy under A, but when the object is moved to B, the child is not able to perceive which side the toys are, even after seeing the experimenter put the toy directly under B. This video still seems to prove this point.
      However, alternative explanations can be offered, such as:
      1) infants tend to repeated a previous motor behaviour, especially if they are rewarded with praise after each time they find the toy at A
      2) infants may have poor memory
      It is still mind boggling though, because the infant sees the experiment put the toy in B, and some how forgets immediately? I prefer alternative explanation 1, but I feel like something else is going on. Reminds me of Sammy Jankis.

  • @just.inreviews8385
    @just.inreviews8385 Před 4 lety +169

    At 1:39, I also detect a sort of distrust in result of this experiment. In previous instances, he wasn't as resistant to giving up the lion, but once he went to the original hole, did not see the lion there, and saw it in a different hole, he was then more resistant to giving the lion to the researcher. Perhaps - and maybe I'm just speaking nonsense now - this experiment can also reveal a development of distrust to people who take things away from us and "fool us," thus making us cling harder to the thing we want? Maybe not, and definitely not what the experiment is testing, but certainly something to think about.

    • @half.blight
      @half.blight Před 3 lety +24

      excellent observation, meanwhile i'm just amazed that this kid didn't cry at all

    • @brendalg4
      @brendalg4 Před 3 lety +2

      I think researchers need to think more about their research. For example the child looks away. The room should be empty so he doesn't have any distractions

    • @thetobynator1373
      @thetobynator1373 Před 3 lety +33

      It's less about trust and more about learnt behaviours. To not trust someone is an indication of past betrayals and kids don't get to that development stage until they start socialising on the playground. No, this is more of a "I know what is happening, I know what is going to happen" which equates to "I have the lion, I give you the lion, lion disappears in the hole, lion re-appears in the hole, I have the lion again."
      This is the routine; the learnt behaviour. When he looks into the hole and sees that the lion isn't there like he was expecting, he realises that he can't have the lion anymore. Then the lion appears in a different hole and he gets the lion back. But, at this point he understands that the routine can change and surrendering the lion again might mean that he doesn't get the lion back. That's why he's reluctant to give it to up.

    • @just.inreviews8385
      @just.inreviews8385 Před 3 lety +2

      @@thetobynator1373 Ah, excellent counterargument! I hadn't considered that, admittedly.

    • @DovahKanye
      @DovahKanye Před rokem

      "and maybe I'm just speaking nonsense now"
      Great analysis.

  • @newball8772
    @newball8772 Před 3 lety +22

    He gets very happy when she says thank you

  • @robinvsdk
    @robinvsdk Před 3 lety +22

    When he looks away you just know he forgot everything that just happened 🤣🤣

  • @maggiesheldon1535
    @maggiesheldon1535 Před 2 lety +10

    He just LOVES the sound of the lion hitting the box and he wants to make that sound too! So adorable!

  • @user-wy6mr6qs9l
    @user-wy6mr6qs9l Před 6 lety +89

    Thank you, this helped for my developmental psych class!

    • @puddin1944
      @puddin1944 Před 3 lety +1

      What is really being tested here is highly interpretive....Just saying maybe what we are witnessing is operant conditioning....?

  • @EmmaInsua
    @EmmaInsua Před 11 lety +55

    1:40 "c'mon! i don't want to give it to you again, you make it disapiar ¬¬"

  • @shaipasasadaba6658
    @shaipasasadaba6658 Před 6 lety +50

    Me to the baby: NO NO NO DON'T GIVE THE LADY THE LION!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @samhewitt4361
    @samhewitt4361 Před 9 lety +112

    bonsly21 The child fails to inhibit the knowledge that the lion is always (so far) in the box on his left. Also his working memory capacity is not great enough to keep in mind the short term information that the lion has this time been placed on the right side and so he relies on the initial association of left side = toy. It's not about distraction or object permanence. It's about poor inhibitory control and working memory which both develop significantly as we get older

    • @rinserofwinds
      @rinserofwinds Před 8 lety +18

      The working memory explanation does not hold up.
      Stedron, Sahni and Munakata (2005) have done an interesting variation of this experiment without load on the working memory.
      The A not B error still occurs.
      Limited inhibitory control due to a lack in PFC development seems to be the better answer.

    • @dannyboygregory-mccormick9157
      @dannyboygregory-mccormick9157 Před 4 lety +1

      @@rinserofwinds any chance I could get links to this? When my sister was a newborn she was clearly able to recognize the voices of me, mom and dad, and actively stoped ctying to listen and search for only us. She recognized our voices from memory while still in the womb, but no one believes us, saying she could never have retained any such information.

    • @TheMike91393
      @TheMike91393 Před 4 lety +2

      +Danny Boy Greg I don't know anything about nothing but I think sound is different. Ever see those videos of old people with Alzheimer's who can't remember the nurse who gave them the remote two minutes ago but you play a recording of a song they knew when they were younger and they can sing it word for word. Also, the _object_ part of object permanence.

    • @dannyboygregory-mccormick9157
      @dannyboygregory-mccormick9157 Před 4 lety

      @@TheMike91393 I think I did watched the Alzheimer's vid a while back. I also remeber being told a person in more likely to remeber a persons voice over their face. it makes sense that sounds would have a different imprint on memory. My major concern was that I've been told in the past my sister could not have retained memory of voices, because "babies don't have object perminace" then they would cite this study as their sorce. But I think your right , I should probably look more into auditory studies.

    • @brendalg4
      @brendalg4 Před 3 lety +2

      @@dannyboygregory-mccormick9157 what do you do find out? I heard of a story where the father would talk to the baby in the womb. He had nicknamed it Spud. It reacted to its name when it was born

  • @antonettecanlas190
    @antonettecanlas190 Před 3 lety +6

    The baby is so so cute 😭 I just wanna squish those cheeks 😭😭

  • @fahrettintekin1119
    @fahrettintekin1119 Před 4 lety +8

    he has the notion of "object permanence" but he do "A not B error"at the same time :D

  • @9nine11eleven
    @9nine11eleven Před 12 lety +11

    I think for the infant the 'left side finding success' event
    is by far more important than the observational
    aspect of where the object was hidden. Obviously
    for the infant his personal-active 'left side finding success'
    event is superior to the personal-passive
    observation event, to where the object was hidden.

    • @damianeadie510
      @damianeadie510 Před 6 lety

      9nine11eleven Interesting point, as it would make sense to weight successful events against events that have no success... I would want to compare how this kid did in other object permanence tests.
      Beacuse... the woman makes a toy disappear into both holes... But. .. You can always find a new one on the left!
      I studied Piaget 25 years ago and found it fascinating. Piaget himself was quite an intestine chap.

  • @michdie1046
    @michdie1046 Před 3 lety +6

    You can see the trust lost in his eyes 😂

  • @Fillster
    @Fillster Před 4 lety +7

    This is actually interesting. I didn’t know young kids worked like that

    • @Lyonatan
      @Lyonatan Před rokem

      I think the point is that they don't. XD

    • @SirTylerGolf
      @SirTylerGolf Před rokem

      ​@@Lyonatan can you read? The title states that this is a typical 10 month old

    • @Lyonatan
      @Lyonatan Před rokem

      @SirTylerGolf what I meant is they don't "work", as in they do not function, they are dumb as a rock

  • @NazxX11
    @NazxX11 Před 11 lety +10

    @bonsly21 This video considers Jeane Piaget's work. It is an experiment looking into the development of children. It was this task which allowed Piaget to conclude that even when there is mastery of object permanence the child’s knowledge of the world is limited. :) hope this helps

  • @ilmanti
    @ilmanti Před 13 lety +7

    @bscutajar it's not a case of stupidity tbh. It's more a case of repetition and patterns. The human brain is wired to recognize and work with patterns. As children we can understand very simple patterns, and as we grow older (the majority) learn to understand more complex patterns. The child found the lion in the left hole twice... it makes sense to him to try and find it there again.

    • @21area21
      @21area21 Před 4 lety

      That's actually a good argument. I think some base urge/intuition is much less in terms of intellectual cost than robustly tracking the object's location and history.

  • @Miikaika25
    @Miikaika25 Před 13 lety +20

    Well this is also operant conditioning since he was rewarded with the lion the first few times

    • @puddin1944
      @puddin1944 Před 3 lety

      You are absolutly correct Miikaika, This is operant conditioning.

  • @coolmendotdot2
    @coolmendotdot2 Před 5 měsíci

    i like to think this is the human equivalent of not having enough memory to process the situation.
    the kid remembered the remedy to the state "lion lost" as being "check hole", and subsequently, the brain made no more attempt to overwrite the old memory, or more properly, store this new memory at a seperate location, thus causing this error.

  • @DaFroBroforeal
    @DaFroBroforeal Před 4 lety +5

    Aww the kid is sooo cute! 😊

  • @BUILDINGINSP
    @BUILDINGINSP Před 10 lety +11

    Nothing to do with distraction.
    The kid "the brain connections" clearly cannot distinguish
    which hole the lion when into…after seeing which hole it went into.
    The kid keeps going back to the original hole.

  • @shraddhapawar
    @shraddhapawar Před rokem +1

    *My attention span during office meetings be like:*

  • @jorgejorge8878
    @jorgejorge8878 Před rokem +1

    I feel so proud, because I know EACH time where the figurine was. I could easily beat that baby at this game.

  • @dylanmcmahon4198
    @dylanmcmahon4198 Před 4 lety +1

    kid got absolutely prankd

  • @Bwaaattto
    @Bwaaattto Před 3 lety

    Idk why but the little sounds he starts to make at 0:30 are adorable asf

  • @K4kashiSensei
    @K4kashiSensei Před 15 lety +10

    cute baby:)

  • @bannerba-banner2230
    @bannerba-banner2230 Před 11 měsíci

    WHERE DOES THE LION GO?!?! OBJECT PERMANENCE MY ARSE!

  • @hannahhorsch5282
    @hannahhorsch5282 Před 11 lety +3

    Wow, that's really interesting! I want to do this with my 10 month old. lol

  • @rayrowley4013
    @rayrowley4013 Před 4 lety +2

    This reminds me of an article by the onion on how babies are stupid.

  • @solbrando
    @solbrando Před rokem

    my dog is the same way when i put a treat in one hand and show him the hand before i close it. he will always choose the hand that he first saw the treat in even if i switch hands.

  • @bannerba-banner2230
    @bannerba-banner2230 Před 11 měsíci

    Funny how we're all here because we're in college learning about lifespan development...

  • @HelloHigogo
    @HelloHigogo Před 5 lety +11

    This kid doesn't watch Rick and Morty

    • @undergroundindy
      @undergroundindy Před 4 lety +3

      To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Rick and Morty.

    • @HelloHigogo
      @HelloHigogo Před 4 lety +2

      @@undergroundindy The humour is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the jokes will go over a typical viewer's head.

  • @fluffypinkpandas
    @fluffypinkpandas Před 5 lety

    I am here to understand logic and pattern recognition in youth as per my psychology course. Fascinating stuff.

  • @kingaragornii9940
    @kingaragornii9940 Před 4 lety +1

    The other video was teaching her son to think outside the box with the blue water.

  • @malexmartinez4007
    @malexmartinez4007 Před 3 lety +1

    Are the distances of the two holes from the baby equal? I have the impression that the B-hole is father away, hence, the baby does not even attempt to reach for it.

  • @ViRrOorR
    @ViRrOorR Před 4 lety +1

    Thats why memory games are important. But the question is when do you start with them

    • @pagethreemodel
      @pagethreemodel Před 3 lety +2

      Well this baby is 10 months.

    • @cate01a
      @cate01a Před 3 lety +1

      simple, asap. wdym when to start them? sure the kid doesn't understand the world well, though if you expose them to these puzzles and encourage them to learn what's really going on, then they'd surely learn and understand what's going on soon - which would also basically make them smarter. (I say basically because imo "smart"/iq/intelligence are such shit terms as they're basically meaningless. Some dead-end non-academic low life druggy hobo could very well be a genius, though people would say they're dumb because they're not academic (i.e, ability to remember stupid fucking trivia for literally years of their life)).

  • @jakezyjx
    @jakezyjx Před 3 lety +1

    The second time she put it on the right side and I saw him looking at the right side as she put it in and when he has to choose he still chose the left side: “You had great potential, now you’re just a disappointment “

  • @illuminatiaqi6130
    @illuminatiaqi6130 Před 4 lety

    This is why we go to school when we are 5-6

  • @beszmi
    @beszmi Před 3 lety +1

    This was unfair. He had too low ELO to be put here by MM

  • @malexmartinez4007
    @malexmartinez4007 Před 3 lety

    Baby: Happily hits table while waiting to get the elephant.
    Me: Throw the elephant to the experimenter for trying to take It away from me.

  • @Oni219
    @Oni219 Před 3 lety

    Now put him in a different position and watch him have to learn the holes all over again.

  • @supe4701
    @supe4701 Před 3 lety

    If I got the math right, the kid would now be 12 and it possible they watched this video by now

  • @spectrophotography
    @spectrophotography Před 15 lety +2

    Thanks for the video

  • @geraldinediaz7717
    @geraldinediaz7717 Před 11 lety

    claro que para el es mas importante el "exito" que pudo tener ya que segun piaget decia que el error A no B es una comprension incompleta de la permanencia del objeto y tambien por una vision egocentrica del niño...

  • @pepemoreno4397
    @pepemoreno4397 Před 2 lety

    Tendrá que ver el sitio donde esta sentado el bebe? Que pasaría si sentaran al bebe al centro de la mesa?

  • @deborahel
    @deborahel Před 14 lety +3

    thank you!

  • @10418
    @10418 Před 4 lety +1

    Her voice 😂

  • @luckbox3601
    @luckbox3601 Před 4 lety

    1:54 “where in the hell did my lion go?”

  • @kzcreationzmore
    @kzcreationzmore Před 4 lety

    This kid is almost 11 now... this hurts my brain help

    • @brendalg4
      @brendalg4 Před 3 lety

      That hurt your brain? Watch black-and-white shows where the people are all already dead. Also the laugh track you are hearing is from people who are already dead.

    • @kzcreationzmore
      @kzcreationzmore Před 3 lety

      @@brendalg4 true true :,) depressing

  • @Austin-kt7ky
    @Austin-kt7ky Před 4 lety +2

    Cave Johnson here.

  • @em-jd4do
    @em-jd4do Před 3 lety

    me when someone takes my stim toys

  • @KarlaHolmboe
    @KarlaHolmboe Před 10 lety +1

    Can anybody tell me the dimensions of the box she is using for the task?
    Thanks!

    • @1943vermork
      @1943vermork Před 3 lety +1

      Baby size

    • @cate01a
      @cate01a Před 3 lety

      Why do you ask this? Like, do you mean to ask how the lion is put inside the box? Or that you want to know the actual dimensions of the box?
      If you want to replicate this, simply have two opaque boxes with lids and a toy. While the kid is looking, change the location of the toy.

  • @jeffw1267
    @jeffw1267 Před 6 lety +1

    Why is this kid only 10 months old and he already has hair like Tony Randall?

    • @MelB868
      @MelB868 Před 3 lety

      I was born with that much hair.

  • @Obedthian-UK
    @Obedthian-UK Před 2 lety

    wow very cool

  • @Hacksaw.Jim.Duggan
    @Hacksaw.Jim.Duggan Před 3 lety

    i think the baby thought the reward was given after he went to the hole on the left of him. thats why he kept choosing it. i dont know why this test would think any different. the kid obviously doesnt possess higher thought processes yet. he cant even speak. so what is the actual point of this test? bow i am confused 🧐 🤔

    • @brendalg4
      @brendalg4 Před 3 lety

      To find out the age when this process develops

  • @lucianolarrosa9536
    @lucianolarrosa9536 Před 3 lety +1

    like si venis por el campus de psico

  • @bonsly21
    @bonsly21 Před 11 lety +1

    can somebody explain me what this video is about? pls?

    • @mixingbyjohn4699
      @mixingbyjohn4699 Před 6 lety +2

      no...lol

    • @tomjackson7290
      @tomjackson7290 Před 4 lety

      Lmao

    • @10418
      @10418 Před 4 lety +2

      He doesn’t know where the fuck the lion is even if he watch where the adult human puts it

    • @noodlery7034
      @noodlery7034 Před 4 lety

      @@10418 This comment is from 7 years ago...

  • @MissMariQueen
    @MissMariQueen Před rokem +1

    I cannot believe the number of uneducated comments. When you don't know the reason for the study and know nothing about developmental psychology, you should go and watch a cartoon videos, which is more likely at your level of comprehension.

    • @poop_storm
      @poop_storm Před rokem +2

      I’m a psych major and I still think it’s funny to observe a stupid baby from time to time

  • @Jhyzone
    @Jhyzone Před 13 lety +1

    @Miikaika25 How?

  • @solongol1307
    @solongol1307 Před 3 lety

    Thk you

  • @JimNagle87
    @JimNagle87 Před 10 lety +4

    Object Permanence

  • @thegreatestquest8358
    @thegreatestquest8358 Před 4 lety

    I put 20 bucks on you kid! 🤦‍♂️

  • @childishcappuccino1899

    Is this guy joking. Smh

  • @layali7792
    @layali7792 Před 2 lety

    🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

  • @thelastkiwii322
    @thelastkiwii322 Před 3 lety

    OMG THIS IS SAD

    • @MissMariQueen
      @MissMariQueen Před rokem

      Why is this sad? Only an ignorant would make such comment. Study some psychology. I bet you don't even know who Piaget was.

    • @thelastkiwii322
      @thelastkiwii322 Před rokem

      @@MissMariQueen what did i ever do to you? 🙂

  • @bscutajar
    @bscutajar Před 13 lety +1

    @ilmanti when we're young, all of us are stupid. i guess our definition of stupid varies. but i define it as lack of intelligence to some degree. when we're young all of us lack intelligence to some degree.

    • @MelB868
      @MelB868 Před 3 lety

      I think you lack intelligence now. This is a baby.

    • @bscutajar
      @bscutajar Před 3 lety

      @@MelB868 I was replying to someone else's comment you dumb fuck

  • @culturedvulture2015
    @culturedvulture2015 Před 4 lety

    Oh my god these comments in baby videos are so mean hahaha

  • @bildahome
    @bildahome Před 4 lety

    Obvisouly Thats not me when I was 10 months

    • @cate01a
      @cate01a Před 3 lety

      pretentious aresehole. you certainly would've been that stupid and ignorant at that age. I would also, and so would literally every other human on earth (though perhaps excluding savants).

  • @cowyeti21
    @cowyeti21 Před 2 lety +1

    im 19 and im smarter than this kid

    • @Obedthian-UK
      @Obedthian-UK Před 2 lety +1

      yeah cuz your 19 and this kid is a newborn

    • @IOwnKazakhstan
      @IOwnKazakhstan Před rokem

      @@Obedthian-UK wow dude you're so cool and smart and epic and the savior of this baby and totally didn't miss the joke.

    • @Obedthian-UK
      @Obedthian-UK Před rokem

      @@IOwnKazakhstan thank you thank you

    • @DONUT2858
      @DONUT2858 Před 13 dny

      Dear lord I hope so....

  • @kyliekozub5181
    @kyliekozub5181 Před 5 lety

    Shu