Infant pointing: Communication to cooperate or communication to learn?

TitleInfant pointing: Communication to cooperate or communication to learn?
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsSouthgate, V., C. van Maanen, and G. Csibra
Journal titleChild Development
Year2007
Pages735 - 740
Volume78
Issue3
Abstract

Tomasello, Carpenter, and Liszkowski (2007) present compelling data to support the view that infant pointing, from the outset, is communicative and deployed in many of the same situations in which adults would ordinarily point for one another, either to share their interest in something, or to informatively help the other person. This commentary concurs with the view that infant pointing is a communicative gesture, but challenges their interpretation of the motives behind pointing in 12-month-olds. An alternative account is proposed, according to which infant pointing is neither declarative nor imperative, but interrogative, and rather than being driven by the motive to share or help, it may serve a powerful cultural learning mechanism by which infants can obtain information from knowledgeable adults.

Languageeng
Notes

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Publisher linkhttp://web.ceu.hu/phil/csibra/papers/southgate.etal.pointing.2007.pdf
Unit: 
Cognitive Development Center (CDC)