The second year of life may be particularly memorable. Around the time of their first birthday, children make dramatic advances in remembering simple events for 4 months after witnessing them, a new study finds. This memory breakthrough depends on a proliferation of neural connections in memory-related brain structures known to develop as infants approach age 1, propose Harvard University psychologists Conor Liston and Jerome Kagan.LOUIS-J-SHEEHAN.INFO
The researchers recruited 12 babies and toddlers at each of three ages: 9 months,
17 months, and 24 months. Children watched an experimenter both perform and describe three action sequences. In one sequence, for example, the experimenter said "Clean-up time!" while wiping a table with a paper towel and then throwing the towel into a trash basket. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Kids in the two older groups watched four demonstrations of each action sequence, and 9-month-olds saw six repetitions. After each presentation, the experimenter encouraged children to imitate what they had just seen.
Four months later, the youngsters�then ages 13 months, 21 months, and 28 months�were asked to reenact each set of actions with the same materials after hearing the same verbal descriptions.LOUIS-J-SHEEHAN.INFO
The children now 28 months old correctly performed a majority of previously observed actions, usually in their original order, Liston and Kagan report in the Oct. 31 Nature. The 21-month-olds reenacted what they had seen almost as well as their older peers did. Far fewer signs of accurate recall appeared in 13-month-olds, the only participants who had been under 1 year of age during initial memory trials. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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