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Child Psychology: A New Look Inside Babies' Minds

2009-08-15 10:18:17

Sure, they may while away their days eating, sleeping and soiling diapers. But

Alison Gopnik says it's high time that babies got some respect. In her new

book, The Philosophical Baby, the University of California, Berkeley,

psychologist says modern research is revolutionizing our understanding of the

first years of life, revealing early childhood to be a frenzied period of

intellectual, emotional and moral development. "Any child will put the most

productive scientist to shame," she writes. Gopnik spoke with TIME about the

origins of creativity, the "boondoggle" of educational toys and discerning

right and wrong during this uniquely fertile period of life.

TIME: You say that for most of history, babies were seen as "vegetables with a

few reflexes." What's going on in a baby's mind that we didn't appreciate

before?

Gopnik: If you just casually look at a baby, it doesn't look like there's very

much going on there, but they know more and learn more than we would ever have

thought. Every single minute is incredibly full of thought and novelty. It's

easy as adults to take for granted everything it took to arrive at the state

where we are. (See pictures of pregnant-belly art.)

You say babies are more imaginative and even more conscious than adults.

They take in much more information from different sources than adults do and

work very hard to make sense of that information. It's one reason we think

babies sleep so much - they're doing much harder work than grown-ups are. They

are the R&D department of the human species.

(Read "Bringing Babies to Work.")

How about moral development? One of the great philosophical debates is whether

people are born with an innate sense of right and wrong or whether it develops

over time. Does your research shed light on that question?

Yes, there's quite clearly an innate basis for our moral sentiments. The

youngest children have a great capacity for empathy and altruism. There's a

recent study that shows even 14-month-olds will climb across a bunch of

cushions and go across a room to give you a pen if you drop one. And we know

babies imitate facial expressions and are sensitive to emotions; there seems to

be a very strong connection with other people early on. It is a very hopeful

finding.

(Read "What Do Babies Know?")

What does research suggest about the link between unstructured playtime and

creativity later in life?

There's a little bit of evidence that adults who are novelists or musicians,

for example, tend to remember the imaginary friends they had when they were

children. It's as if they are staying in touch with those childhood abilities

in a way that most of us don't. Successful creative adults seem to combine the

wide-ranging exploration and openness we see in children with the focus and

discipline we see in adults.

I was surprised to read how quickly babies seem to absorb the culture that

surrounds them. For instance, you say Japanese babies tend to be more anxious

than babies from other countries.

That's another thing that studying babies can help make us realize. Many of the

things we just take for granted, that we just think are parts of our [personal]

backgrounds, are really things that we've learned.

What are the holy grails for you now in child psychology? What are the pressing

questions we're trying to figure out?

The real excitement is collaborating with computer scientists and

neuroscientists and starting to understand in detail how children learn so much

so quickly. Another interesting frontier is understanding how learning fits

with children's emotions and moral relationships. Those two things have tended

to be separate - there are people who study emotion and there are people who

study knowledge. Increasingly, we're realizing that those things go hand in

hand for babies. (See TIME's photo-essay "Growing Up with Harry Potter.")

What does all this mean for parents? Does your research have any guidance for

raising children?

One takeaway is that the billion-dollar industry of quote-unquote educational

toys that are supposed to make your baby smarter is a boondoggle. There's no

evidence that any of those things make a difference. Children are learning the

way that other people's minds work, which is much more important to learn than

even letters and numbers. I'm afraid the parenting advice to come out of

developmental psychology is very boring: pay attention to your kids and love

them.