Tool use is a defining feature of human culture, but the developmental origins of this ability remain controversial. One widely accepted view is that tool use represents a discontinuous developmental advance, dependent on the attainment of new symbolic or relational reasoning abilities. In contrast, this project examines the possibility that tool use may emerge more continuously during development. According to this view, tool use is rooted in the perception-action routines that infants employ to explore and act on their environments. In this connection, the present proposal examines how tool use may constitute an extension of infants' object manipulation skills. Three primary issues are addressed. First, the proposed studies consider how tool use may build on infants' efforts to relate objects to substrates in their surroundings. Second, the project explores whether tool use may be an outgrowth of infant object manipulation behaviors. For this purpose, longitudinal studies are proposed to gather kinematic data on object manipulation and tool use behaviors that are hypothesized to involve similar manual actions. Third, the proposed research examines how infants may learn about potential relations between objects and substrates by observing the outcomes of actions performed by others. Across the project, these issues will be addressed in a series of experiments with infants from 6 to 15 months of age. The methodologies will involve behavioral observation and kinematic studies. Taken together, the results of the proposed work are likely to illuminate how tool use develops in infants, suggest interventions for promoting tool use in typically and non-typically developing children, and inform debate over the extent to which tool use is uniquely human. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD043842-02
Application #
6830236
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-4 (07))
Program Officer
Freund, Lisa S
Project Start
2004-02-01
Project End
2009-01-31
Budget Start
2005-02-01
Budget End
2006-01-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2005
Total Cost
$304,283
Indirect Cost
Name
Tulane University
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
053785812
City
New Orleans
State
LA
Country
United States
Zip Code
70118
Jung, Wendy P; Kahrs, Björn A; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2018) Fitting handled objects into apertures by 17- to 36-month-old children: The dynamics of spatial coordination. Dev Psychol 54:228-239
Lockman, Jeffrey J; Kahrs, Björn A (2017) New Insights into the Development of Human Tool Use. Curr Dir Psychol Sci 26:330-334
Jung, Wendy P; Kahrs, Björn A; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2015) Manual action, fitting, and spatial planning: relating objects by young children. Cognition 134:128-39
Maldarelli, Jennifer E; Kahrs, Björn A; Hunt, Sarah C et al. (2015) Development of early handwriting: Visual-motor control during letter copying. Dev Psychol 51:879-88
Kahrs, Björn A; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2014) Building Tool Use From Object Manipulation: A Perception-Action Perspective. Ecol Psychol 26:88-97
Kahrs, Björn A; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2014) Tool Using. Child Dev Perspect 8:231-236
Kahrs, Björn Alexander; Jung, Wendy P; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2014) When does tool use become distinctively human? Hammering in young children. Child Dev 85:1050-1061
Kahrs, Björn A; Jung, Wendy P; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2013) Motor origins of tool use. Child Dev 84:810-6
Kahrs, Bjorn Alexander; Jung, Wendy P; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2012) What is the role of infant banging in the development of tool use? Exp Brain Res 218:315-20
Kahrs, Björn Alexander; Lockman, Jeffrey J (2012) [Tool use of objects emerge continuously.] Enfance 64:61-72