158 results on '"Robert Lickliter"'
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2. Development as explanation: Understanding phenotypic stability and variability after the failure of genetic determinism
- Author
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David S. Moore and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Biophysics ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The role of task difficulty in directing selective attention in bobwhite quail ( Colinus virginianus ) neonates: A developmental test of the intersensory redundancy hypothesis
- Author
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Robert Lickliter, Lorraine E. Bahrick, and Jimena Vaillant‐Mekras
- Subjects
Behavioral Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Anagenesis
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. How deep do we have to go to rehabilitate evolutionary psychology? Reply to Bjorklund et al. (2022)
- Author
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David S. Moore, David C. Witherington, Darcia Narvaez, Timothy I. Vandiver, and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Psychology ,General Medicine ,Biological Evolution ,General Psychology - Abstract
Disciplines like evolutionary developmental psychology admirably focus on trying to rehabilitate narrow evolutionary psychology (NEP) from within, by adding a developmental focus to NEP's tenets of adaptationism and computationalism. We argue, however, that these tenets are fundamentally incompatible with taking psychology and its development seriously, and that the kinds of modifications introduced by evolutionary developmental psychologists do not go deep enough to qualitatively change the nondevelopmental outlook of NEP. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Evolving evolutionary psychology
- Author
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David C. Witherington, Timothy I. Vandiver, David S. Moore, Robert Lickliter, and Darcia Narvaez
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Developmental cognitive neuroscience ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Developmental Science ,Evolutionary psychology ,Biological Evolution ,Epistemology ,Deep history ,Paradigm shift ,Cognitive Science ,Humans ,Psychology ,Darwinism ,Psychological Theory ,General Psychology - Abstract
Which evolutionary theory can best benefit psychological theory, research, and application? The most well-known school of evolutionary psychology has a narrow conceptual perspective (a.k.a., "Narrow Evolutionary Psychology" or NEP). Proponents of NEP have long argued that their brand of evolutionary psychology represents a full-fledged scientific revolution, with Buss (2020) recently likening NEP's scientific impact to that of a Copernican or Darwinian paradigm shift. However, NEP stands on two traditions that are now the subjects of serious debate and revision: the neo-Darwinian adaptationist framework within evolutionary biology, and the computationalist "mind-as-computer" framework within cognitive science. Although NEP calls itself revolutionary, the significant revolutions taking place today in both evolutionary biology and cognitive science reveal NEP to be rooted in the orthodoxies of the past. We propose a more inclusive, developmental evolutionary psychology theory (DEPTH) better suited for our field in multiple ways, from acknowledging epigenesis to incorporating developmental science. To discern appropriate baselines for human nature and for human becoming, one must integrate developmental neuroscience, anthropology, and cognitive archeology. To be of value in addressing and remedying the challenges facing humanity, psychological theories must recognize the central importance of our plasticity, evolved developmental niche, and deep history. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2021
7. Hearing Better with the Right Eye? The Lateralization of Multisensory Processing Affects Auditory Learning in Northern Bobwhite Quail (
- Author
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Christopher, Harshaw, Cassie Barasch, Ford, and Robert, Lickliter
- Subjects
genetic structures ,Article - Abstract
Precocial avian species exhibit a high degree of lateralization of perceptual and motor abilities, including preferential eye use for tasks such as social recognition and predator detection. Such lateralization has been related, in part, to differential experience prior to hatch. That is, due to spatial and resulting postural constraints late in incubation, one eye and hemisphere—generally the right eye / left hemisphere—receive greater amounts of stimulation than the contralateral eye / hemisphere. This raises the possibility that the left hemisphere may specialize or show relative advantages in integrating information across visual and auditory modalities, given that it typically receives greater amounts of multimodal auditory and visual stimulation prior to hatch. The present study represents an initial investigation of this question in a precocial avian species, the Northern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus). Day-old bobwhite chicks received 5 min training sessions in which they vocalized to receive contingent playback of a bobwhite maternal call, presented with or without a light that flashed in synchrony with the notes of the call (i.e., bimodal versus unimodal exposure, respectively). Chicks were trained with or without eye patches that allowed them to experience the visual component of the bimodal stimulus with only the left eye (LE), right eye (RE), or both eyes (i.e., binocular; BIN). Finally, the light was placed in various positions relative to the speakers playing the maternal call across three experiments. 24 hrs later chicks were provided a simultaneous choice test between the familiarized and a novel bobwhite maternal call. Given that the right eye and ear typically face outward and are thus unoccluded by the body during late prenatal development, we hypothesized that RE chicks would show facilitated learning under bimodal conditions compared to all other training conditions. This hypothesis was partially confirmed in Experiment 1, when the light was positioned 40 cm above the source of the maternal call. However, we also observed evidence of suppressed learning in chicks provided BIN exposure to the bimodal audio-visual stimulus that was not present during auditory-only training. Experiments 2 and 3 demonstrated that this was likely related to activation of a left-hemisphere dependent fear response when the left eye was exposed to a visual stimulus that loomed above the auditory stimulus. These results indicate that multisensory processing is lateralized in a precocial bird and that these species may thus provide a unique model for studying experience-dependent plasticity of intersensory perception.
- Published
- 2021
8. The Development of Multisensory Attention Skills
- Author
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James Torrence Todd, Lorraine E. Bahrick, and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Crossmodal ,Amodal perception ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2020
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9. Effects of multimodal synchrony on infant attention and heart rate during events with social and nonsocial stimuli
- Author
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Lorraine E. Bahrick, Lori M. Curtindale, Robert Lickliter, and John Colombo
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Male ,Time Factors ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Social stimuli ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Heart Rate ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Orientation ,Perception ,Heart rate ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Social Behavior ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Infant ,Alertness ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Auditory Perception ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Attention is a state of readiness or alertness, associated with behavioral and psychophysiological responses, that facilitates learning and memory. Multisensory and dynamic events have been shown to elicit more attention and produce greater sustained attention in infants than auditory or visual events alone. Such redundant and often temporally synchronous information guides selectivity and facilitates perception, learning, and memory of properties of events specified by redundancy. In addition, events involving faces or other social stimuli provide an extraordinary amount of redundant information that attracts and sustains attention. In the current study, 4- and 8-month-old infants were shown 2-min multimodal videos featuring social or nonsocial stimuli to determine the relative roles of synchrony and stimulus category in inducing attention. Behavioral measures included average looking time and peak look duration, and convergent measurement of heart rate (HR) allowed for the calculation of HR-defined phases of attention: Orienting (OR), sustained attention (SA), and attention termination (AT). The synchronous condition produced an earlier onset of SA (less time in OR) and a deeper state of SA than the asynchronous condition. Social stimuli attracted and held attention (longer duration of peak looks and lower HR than nonsocial stimuli). Effects of synchrony and the social nature of stimuli were additive, suggesting independence of their influence on attention. These findings are the first to demonstrate different HR-defined phases of attention as a function of intersensory redundancy, suggesting greater salience and deeper processing of naturalistic synchronous audiovisual events compared with asynchronous ones.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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10. An Intelligent Guide to Human Intelligence: It’s All about Development
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Development (topology) ,Knowledge management ,business.industry ,Human intelligence ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,business ,Psychology - Published
- 2018
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11. Metatheory and the Primacy of Conceptual Analysis in Developmental Science
- Author
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Willis F. Overton, Peter J. Marshall, Robert Lickliter, Darcia Narvaez, and David C. Witherington
- Subjects
Conceptualization ,05 social sciences ,Subject (philosophy) ,050109 social psychology ,Developmental Science ,Research process ,Epistemology ,Meaning (philosophy of language) ,Embodied cognition ,Metatheory ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sensibility ,Sociology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The practice of science entails more than just repeated cycles of theory construction, hypothesis generation, and empirical investigation. Broader, metatheoretical levels of conceptualization necessarily condition all aspects of the research process, establishing the very meaning and sensibility of science’s empirical and theoretical activities. When debate arises at these metatheoretical levels, it is the subject of conceptual analysis, not empirical investigation. In this article, we examine the overarching metatheoretical divide that lies at the heart of many key theoretical debates in science: the divide between a Cartesian-Split-Mechanistic research paradigm and a Process-Relational research paradigm. We instantiate this divide in terms of three prominent domains of inquiry within developmental science: the study of epigenesis (including epigenetics); the study of embodiment, specifically embodied cognition; and the study of baselines for human nature and development. We reveal how core issues and theoretical debates within these domains derive from metatheoretical, not theoretical, points of contention.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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12. The intersensory redundancy hypothesis: Extending the principle of unimodal facilitation to prenatal development
- Author
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Robert Lickliter, Jimena Vaillant‐Mekras, and Lorraine E. Bahrick
- Subjects
Time Factors ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Embryonic Development ,Stimulation ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Choice Behavior ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Perceptual learning ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Animals ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Colinus ,Selective attention ,Pitch Perception ,media_common ,biology ,05 social sciences ,Amodal perception ,Recognition, Psychology ,biology.organism_classification ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Visual Perception ,Facilitation ,Vocalization, Animal ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation ,Bobwhite quail ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Selective attention to different properties of stimulation provides the foundation for perception, learning, and memory. The Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH) proposes that early in development information presented redundantly across two or more modalities (multimodal) selectively recruits attention to and enhances perceptual learning of amodal properties, whereas information presented to a single sense modality (unimodal) enhances perceptual learning of modality-specific properties. The present study is the first to assess this principle of unimodal facilitation in non-human animals in prenatal development. We assessed bobwhite quail embryos’ prenatal detection of pitch, a modality-specific property, under conditions of unimodal and bimodal (synchronous or asynchronous) exposure. Chicks exposed to prenatal unimodal auditory stimulation or asynchronous bimodal (audiovisual) stimulation preferred the familiarized maternal call over a novel pitch-modified maternal call following hatching, whereas chicks exposed to redundant (synchronous) audiovisual stimulation failed to prefer the familiar call over the pitch-modified call. These results provide further evidence that selective attention is recruited to specific stimulus properties of events in early development and that these biases are evident even during the prenatal period.
- Published
- 2017
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13. Coordinated movement is influenced by prenatal light experience in bobwhite quail chicks (Colinus virginianus)
- Author
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Starlie C. Belnap and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Light ,Video Recording ,Sensory system ,Motor Activity ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Colinus ,Longitudinal Studies ,Postural Balance ,Hatchling ,Motor skill ,Likelihood Functions ,Motivation ,biology ,Forward locomotion ,biology.organism_classification ,Quail ,Motor coordination ,030104 developmental biology ,Linear Models ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Bobwhite quail - Abstract
Sensory-motor development begins early during embryogenesis and is influenced by sensory experience. Little is known about the prenatal factors that influence the development of motor coordination. Here we investigated whether and to what extent prenatal light experience can influence the development of motor coordination in bobwhite quail hatchlings. Quail embryos were incubated under four light conditions: no light (dark), 2h of total light (2HR), 6h of total light (6HR), and diffused sunlight (controls). Hatchlings were video recording walking down a runway at three developmental ages (12, 24, and 48h). Videos were assessed for forward locomotion, a measurement of motor coordination, falls, a measurement of motor instability, and motivation to complete the task. We anticipated a linear decline of coordination with a reduction in prenatal light experience and improved coordination with age. Furthermore, as motor coordination becomes more laborious we anticipated motivation to complete the task would decline. However, our findings revealed hatchlings did not uniformly improve with age as expected, nor did the reduction of light result in a linear reduction in motor coordination. Instead, we found a more complex relationship with 6HR and 2HR hatchlings showing distinct patterns of stability and instability. Similarly, we found a reduction in motivation within the 6HR light condition. It appears that prenatal light exposure influences the development of postnatal motor coordination and we discuss these finding in light of neurodevelopmental processes influenced by light experience.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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14. Epigenesis without Preformationism
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and Hunter Honeycutt
- Subjects
Preformationism ,Environmental ethics ,Psychology ,Epigenesis - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Prenatal light exposure influences gait performance and body composition in bobwhite quail chicks
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and Starlie C. Belnap
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Light ,Period (gene) ,Physiology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Incubation period ,Body Mass Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bone Lengthening ,Pregnancy ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Colinus ,Longitudinal Studies ,Hatchling ,Incubation ,Gait ,biology ,05 social sciences ,Embryogenesis ,Embryo ,biology.organism_classification ,Crepuscular ,Animals, Newborn ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Bobwhite quail - Abstract
Maternal nesting behavior, which includes periods of patterned inattention, provides key elements essential for avian embryonic development, including regulation of temperature and light. For example, avian research consistently shows the importance of prenatal light exposure for several developmental processes; however, this research has primarily focused on artificial light regimens (i.e. 24 hr, 0 hr light). Comparatively less is known about how exposure to naturally occurring light patterns during incubation influence motor performance, body composition (i.e. body mass, bone length), and developmental age (incubation length). Here we conducted two experiments which investigated the effects of prenatal light exposure on developmental age, body composition, and gait performance in 1-day-old bobwhite quail. Experiment 1 investigated crepuscular light exposure during the last two days of incubation under two light duration treatments (2 hr & 6 hr) compared to a 12 hr continuous light schedule. Results indicated crepuscular prenatal light experience extended the incubation period for 2 hr exposed embryos, but not for 6 hr exposed embryos and negatively influenced postnatal body composition and postnatal gait performance when compared to 12 hr continuous light embryos. Experiment 2 examined the influence of prenatal light duration (2 hr vs 6 hr) and light presentation (crepuscular vs sporadic). Results demonstrated sporadic light presentation improved gait performance in 2 hr exposed hatchlings, but not 6 hr exposed hatchlings, improved body composition in 6 hr exposed hatchlings, but not 2 hr exposed hatchlings, and did not alter incubation length when compared to crepuscular light counterparts. This study provides further evidence for the importance of maternally regulated sensory stimulation during the prenatal period on early postnatal motor development.
- Published
- 2019
16. Towards a Truly Developmental Epigenetics
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and David C. Witherington
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Reductionism ,Process (engineering) ,05 social sciences ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Epigenetics ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Conceptual and empirical advances across the biological and psychological sciences have made it increasingly clear that genetic and environmental factors cannot be meaningfully partitioned when attempting to explain development. This should be a major theme within the contemporary field of epigenetics. However, the field has yet to fully extricate itself from reductionist tendencies in its conceptualization of developmental relations. Epigenetics today still routinely promotes both a reductionist privileging of molecular over molar levels of explanation and a reductionist focus on separate and distinct roles for genes and environment in any given developmental relation. We argue that the field needs to more rigorously pursue a process-oriented framework that is integrated across molecular, organismal, and environmental levels of biological organization. Transcending the worn and outdated nature-nurture controversy will require a truly developmental epigenetics that embraces the importance of emergence, context, and hierarchical relations in all developmental explanation.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Transcending the Nature-Nurture Debate through Epigenetics: Are We There Yet?
- Author
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David C. Witherington and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Anthropology ,Philosophy ,05 social sciences ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Environmental ethics ,Epigenetics ,Nature versus nurture ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Behaviour Genetics: A Critical Perspective on the Role of Genes in Behaviour
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and Timo Järvilehto
- Subjects
Critical perspective ,Evolutionary biology ,Biology ,Human behaviour genetics ,Gene ,Human development (humanity) ,Behavioural genetics ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Hearing better with the right eye? The lateralization of multisensory processing affects auditory learning in Northern bobwhite quail (Colinus Virginianus) chicks
- Author
-
Cassie B. Ford, Robert Lickliter, and Christopher Harshaw
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,biology ,Auditory learning ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Stimulation ,Colinus ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,biology.organism_classification ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Lateralization of brain function ,Food Animals ,Perception ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Animal Science and Zoology ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Precocial ,Bobwhite quail ,media_common - Abstract
Precocial avian species exhibit a high degree of lateralization of perceptual and motor abilities, including preferential eye use for tasks such as social recognition and predator detection. Such lateralization has been related, in part, to differential experience prior to hatch. That is, due to spatial and resulting postural constraints late in incubation, one eye and hemisphere-generally the right eye / left hemisphere-receive greater amounts of stimulation than the contralateral eye / hemisphere. This raises the possibility that the left hemisphere may specialize or show relative advantages in integrating information across visual and auditory modalities, given that it typically receives greater amounts of multimodal auditory and visual stimulation prior to hatch. The present study represents an initial investigation of this question in a precocial avian species, the Northern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus). Day-old bobwhite chicks received 5 min training sessions in which they vocalized to receive contingent playback of a bobwhite maternal call, presented with or without a light that flashed in synchrony with the notes of the call (i.e., bimodal versus unimodal exposure, respectively). Chicks were trained with or without eye patches that allowed them to experience the visual component of the bimodal stimulus with only the left eye (LE), right eye (RE), or both eyes (i.e., binocular; BIN). Finally, the light was placed in various positions relative to the speakers playing the maternal call across three experiments. 24 hrs later chicks were provided a simultaneous choice test between the familiarized and a novel bobwhite maternal call. Given that the right eye and ear typically face outward and are thus unoccluded by the body during late prenatal development, we hypothesized that RE chicks would show facilitated learning under bimodal conditions compared to all other training conditions. This hypothesis was partially confirmed in Experiment 1, when the light was positioned 40 cm above the source of the maternal call. However, we also observed evidence of suppressed learning in chicks provided BIN exposure to the bimodal audio-visual stimulus that was not present during auditory-only training. Experiments 2 and 3 demonstrated that this was likely related to activation of a left-hemisphere dependent fear response when the left eye was exposed to a visual stimulus that loomed above the auditory stimulus. These results indicate that multisensory processing is lateralized in a precocial bird and that these species may thus provide a unique model for studying experience-dependent plasticity of intersensory perception.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Prenatal incubation temperature affects neonatal precocial birds' locomotor behavior
- Author
-
Starlie C. Belnap, Robert Lickliter, and John P. Currea
- Subjects
Bone growth ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,biology ,Behavior, Animal ,Hatching ,Temperature ,Embryonic Development ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Motor Activity ,biology.organism_classification ,Quail ,Motor coordination ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Andrology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Animals, Newborn ,Animals ,Precocial ,Hatchling ,Incubation ,Motor skill ,Bobwhite quail - Abstract
Temperature during the prenatal period is an important factor for developing embryos. Extensive human and animal research indicate embryos are sensitive to small fluctuations in temperature which has profound effects on phenotype development. Much of this research has focused on survivability, morphology, and incubation duration, but comparatively less in known about how prenatal temperature influences the development of motor coordination. In this study, we experimentally tested whether exposure to naturally occurring cool (36.9 °C) or warm (38.1 °C) thermal conditions for a brief period (4 days) during early incubation can influence postnatal motor performance in neonatal bobwhite quail hatchlings. We compared gait spatiotemporal parameters, body kinematics, and locomotive behaviors of control chicks incubated in an optimal thermal environment (37.5 °C) with thermally manipulated chicks. Experimental temperature treatment began on embryonic day five (E5) and ended on E8. Chicks were tested 24-h after hatching. Cool thermal exposure during incubation delayed hatching, reduced body mass, and increased fall frequency, intertarsal joint angle and stride length variability during the gait task compared to optimally incubated chicks. Warm thermal exposure during incubation delayed bone growth and increased fall frequency relative to controls. We discuss the relationship between motor development and thermal regulatory processes and provide insight into how spatiotemporal parameters aid in elucidating subtle differences in coordinated movement which may contribute to atypical motor development and be associated with neural developmental disorders. We provide the first spatiotemporal evidence for the importance of optimal thermal microclimates for typical prenatal motor development.
- Published
- 2018
21. Conceptions of Development
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and David J. Lewkowicz
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Instinct ,Word learning ,Life span ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Epigenetic Analysis ,Musical ,Psychology ,Competence (human resources) ,media_common - Abstract
D. Lewkowicz, R. Lickliter, Introduction. M. Hofer, The Riddle of Development. G. Gottlieb, Emergence of the Developmental Manifold Concept from an Epigenetic Analysis of Instinctive Behavior. C. Moore, On Differences and Development. M. West, A. King, The Ontogeny of Competence. W. Mason, The Natural History of Primate Behavioral Development: An Organismic Perspective. R. Clifton, Learning about Infants. G. Michel, Development of Infant Handedness. Gerald Turkewitz, Wasn't I Stupid: Or, Once You Know It's So Obvious. D. Bjorklund, Memory, Strategies, Knowledge, and Evolution: The Evolution of a Developmentalist. S. Trehub, The Musical Infant. L. Smith, How to be Smart: Lessons from Word Learning. K. Fischer, Z. Yan, The Development of Dynamic Skill Theory. R. Lerner, Multigenesis: Levels of Professional Integration in the Life Span of a Developmental Scientist.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The influence of prenatal experience on behavioral and social development: The benefits and limitations of an animal model
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Exploratory research ,Social Environment ,Developmental psychology ,Formative assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Perception ,Comparative research ,Human development (biology) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Animals ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Social Change ,Child ,Social Behavior ,media_common ,Instinct ,05 social sciences ,Social change ,Social environment ,Infant ,Cognition ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Disease Models, Animal ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Prenatal experience is both a formative and a regulatory force in the process of development. As a result, birth is not an adequate starting point for explanations of behavioral development. However, surprisingly little is currently known regarding the role of prenatal experience in the emergence and facilitation of perceptual, cognitive, or social development. Our lack of knowledge in this area is due in part to the very restricted experimental manipulations possible with human fetuses. A comparative approach utilizing animal models provides an essential step in addressing this gap in our knowledge and providing testable predictions for studies with human fetuses, infants, and children. Further, animal-based comparative research serves to minimize the amount of exploratory research undertaken with human subjects and hone in on issues and research directions worthy of further research investment. In this article, I review selected animal-based research exploring how developmental influences during the prenatal period can guide and constrain subsequent behavioral and social development. I then discuss the importance of linking the prenatal environment to postnatal outcomes in terms of how psychologists conceptualize “innate” biases, preferences, and skills in the study of human development.
- Published
- 2018
23. Blinking Bird Brains: A Timing Specific Deficit in Auditory Learning in Quail Hatchlings
- Author
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Christopher Harshaw and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
biology ,Auditory learning ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Colinus ,biology.organism_classification ,050105 experimental psychology ,Preference ,Quail ,Developmental psychology ,biology.animal ,Perception ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Difficulty learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Psychology ,Hatchling ,Bobwhite quail ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Contingency perception is critical during infancy, providing the basis for the continuous learning (and re-learning) of the relation between the developing body, self-produced actions, and the environment. Nevertheless, relatively few studies have systematically examined the spatiotemporal parameters that optimize learning during development. Here, we present a series of experiments exploring a novel timing-specific deficit in auditory learning in an animal model, the bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus). In this paradigm, chicks vocalize to hear playback of an unfamiliar maternal call and are later tested for their filial preference for that call over a novel maternal call. Rather than a simple, hyperbolic decline in learning with increased delay between chick vocalization and playback, we found a window—450–900 msec after chicks ceased vocalizing—in which chicks appeared to have difficulty learning and forming a preference for the maternal call. This deficit nonetheless occurred only when the spatial location of call playback switched semi-randomly during training, suggesting an attentional explanation for this deficit. Our findings indicate that optimization of the temporal parameters in operant paradigms with infants can be complex, particularly if tasks requiring the switching of attention between spatial locations. Our findings may thus be instructive for other developmental research with infants employing operant components.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Integrating Development and Evolution in Psychological Science: Evolutionary Developmental Psychology, Developmental Systems, and Explanatory Pluralism
- Author
-
David C. Witherington and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Developmental systems theory ,Psychological science ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Developmental psychology ,Evolutionary developmental psychology ,Developmental stage theories ,Pluralism (political theory) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
New attempts in psychological science at integrating developmental (individual-level) and evolutionary (population-level) accounts of phenotypic stability and variability have achieved increasing prominence of late. Foremost among such attempts is the field of evolutionary developmental psychology (EDP). EDP proposes that selective pressures in evolution inform psychological development through a synthesis of the Darwinian/neo-Darwinian selectionist perspective embraced by evolutionary psychology and the developmental dynamics perspective endorsed by developmental systems theory. We examine the theoretical assumptions behind selectionist and developmental perspectives and argue that both perspectives are ontologically incompatible. We provide an alternative framework for integrating developmental and evolutionary explanations that transcend this ontological division of selectional and developmental perspectives. This framework promotes a pluralistic approach that moves beyond traditional antecedent/consequent, mechanistic views of causality and embraces both functional (part-to-whole) and structural (whole-to-part) modes of explanation as distinct, equally legitimate, and simultaneously applicable perspectives in understanding phenotypic stability and variability over time.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Increased yolk progesterone interferes with prenatal auditory learning and elevates emotional reactivity in bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus)chicks
- Author
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Claudia Vallin, Robert Lickliter, and Joshua A. Herrington
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,food.ingredient ,biology ,Hatching ,Colinus ,biology.organism_classification ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,food ,Endocrinology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Perceptual learning ,Yolk ,Internal medicine ,embryonic structures ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Precocial ,Psychology ,Incubation ,Bobwhite quail ,Developmental Biology ,Hormone - Abstract
Avian eggs contain maternally derived hormones, including testosterone and progesterone. Little is currently known about the effects of these hormones on early behavioral development. We assessed the effects of elevated levels of progesterone levels on prenatal perceptual learning and postnatal emotional reactivity in Northern bobwhite quail. Prior to incubation, eggs received an injection of either progesterone (P) or oil vehicle (V). In P eggs, levels of progesterone were elevated two standard deviations above the mean based on ELISA analysis of progesterone yolk concentrations from a previous study. A third group of eggs served as controls and received no injection (C). Chicks hatched from P eggs displayed elevated levels of emotional reactivity compared to V and C chicks in a tonic immobility task and a hole-in-the-wall emergence task. Chicks from P eggs also failed to demonstrate a preference for a familiarized bobwhite maternal call that had been presented prenatally. In contrast, the V and C chicks demonstrated a significant preference for the familiarized maternal call following hatching, indicating prenatal auditory learning. Our results are consistent with previous findings from precocial birds demonstrating that hormones of maternal origin can influence prenatal perceptual learning as well as emotional reactivity in the period following hatching. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 57: 255–262, 2015.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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26. Kuo’s Epigenetic Vision for Psychological Sciences: Dynamic Developmental Systems Theory
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Developmental systems theory ,Epigenetics ,Psychology - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Biological Processes and Psychological Development
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Learning to Attend Selectively
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and Lorraine E. Bahrick
- Subjects
Dual role ,Process (engineering) ,Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Redundancy (engineering) ,Selective attention ,Early childhood ,Gateway (computer program) ,Psychology ,Article ,General Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Selective attention is the gateway to perceptual processing, learning, and memory and is a skill honed through extensive experience. However, little research has focused on how selective attention develops. Here, we synthesize established and new findings from studies assessing the central role of redundancy across the senses in guiding and constraining this process in infancy and early childhood. We highlight research demonstrating the dual role of intersensory redundancy—its facilitating and interfering effects—in the detection and perceptual processing of various properties of objects and events.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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29. Developmental evolution and the origins of phenotypic variation
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Epigenomics ,Developmental systems theory ,QH301-705.5 ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,Environment ,Models, Biological ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Evolution, Molecular ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Genetic variation ,Epigenetics ,Biology (General) ,Organism ,developmental systems ,Genetics ,Genome ,epigenetics ,Genetic Variation ,General Medicine ,Phenotypic trait ,phenotypic variation ,Phenotype ,Biological Evolution ,probabilistic epigenesis ,Evolutionary biology ,evolutionary innovation - Abstract
Because of the variability of relevant developmental resources across different environments, and because only a portion of the genome is expressed in any individual organism as a result of its specific developmental context and experience, what is actually realized during the course of individual development represents only one of many possibilities. One conclusion to be drawn from this insight is that the origin of phenotypic traits and their variation can be traced to the process of development. In this conceptual overview, I briefly explore how recent efforts to integrate genetic, epigenetic, and environmental levels of analysis through a developmental lens is advancing our understanding of the generation of the stability and variability of phenotypic outcomes observed within and across generations. A growing body of evidence indicates that phenotypes are the outcomes of the whole developmental system, comprised of the organism, with its particular genetic and cellular make-up in its specific physical, biological, and social environments. I conclude that the emergent products of development are epigenetic, not just genetic, and evolutionary explanation cannot be complete without a developmental mode of analysis.
- Published
- 2014
30. A Developmental Evolutionary Framework for Psychology
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Hunter Honeycutt and Robert Lickliter
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Cognitive science ,Developmental systems theory ,Metatheory ,Evolutionary change ,Evolutionary neuroscience ,Causation ,Developmental Science ,Psychology ,Evolutionary psychology ,General Psychology ,Developmental robotics ,Epistemology - Abstract
Evolutionary psychology (EP) was founded on the metatheoretical assumptions of the modern (or neo-Darwinian) synthesis of evolutionary biology, which dichotomize internal from external sources of causation. By prioritizing the former, EP has promoted a preformationist view of individual development, which effectively divorces developmental from evolutionary analysis. The authors argue that these assumptions about development are in need of revision in light of recent advances in genomics, epigenetics, and developmental science. The authors outline a developmental evolutionary framework for psychology, a relational metatheory that integrates the study of developmental and evolutionary mechanisms within one explanatory framework. They argue that knowledge of the dynamics of developmental processes are necessary to illuminate mechanisms of evolutionary change and that the psychological sciences, particularly comparative and developmental psychology, are ideally positioned to contribute to this endeavor.
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- 2013
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31. Anagenesis
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Robert Lickliter
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- 2017
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32. Developmental Evolution: Rethinking Stability and Variation in Biological Systems
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Robert Lickliter
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Variation (linguistics) ,Evolutionary biology ,Biology ,Stability (probability) - Published
- 2017
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33. Neural correlates of intersensory processing in 5-month-old infants
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Maggie W. Guy, Greg D. Reynolds, Lorraine E. Bahrick, and Robert Lickliter
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Auditory perception ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,Visual perception ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Child development ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Event-related potential ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Developmental Biology ,Cognitive psychology ,Recognition memory - Abstract
Two experiments assessing event-related potentials in 5-month-old infants were conducted to examine neural correlates of attentional salience and efficiency of processing of a visual event (woman speaking) paired with redundant (synchronous) speech, nonredundant (asynchronous) speech, or no speech. In Experiment 1, the Nc component associated with attentional salience was greater in amplitude following synchronous audiovisual as compared with asynchronous audiovisual and unimodal visual presentations. A block design was utilized in Experiment 2 to examine efficiency of processing of a visual event. Only infants exposed to synchronous audiovisual speech demonstrated a significant reduction in amplitude of the late slow wave associated with successful stimulus processing and recognition memory from early to late blocks of trials. These findings indicate that events that provide intersensory redundancy are associated with enhanced neural responsiveness indicative of greater attentional salience and more efficient stimulus processing as compared with the same events when they provide no intersensory redundancy in 5-month-old infants.
- Published
- 2013
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34. Modeling Psychobiological Development in the Post-Genomic Era
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Robert Lickliter
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Cognitive science ,Aging ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Social Psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Individual development ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Biological sciences - Published
- 2013
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35. The development of face perception in infancy: Intersensory interference and unimodal visual facilitation
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Lorraine E. Bahrick, Robert Lickliter, and Irina Castellanos
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Male ,Visual perception ,Speech perception ,genetic structures ,Statistics as Topic ,Context (language use) ,Article ,Functional Laterality ,Child Development ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Face perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Cognitive development ,Redundancy (engineering) ,Humans ,Attention ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,Analysis of Variance ,Infant ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Face ,Face (geometry) ,Auditory Perception ,Facilitation ,Female ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Although research has demonstrated impressive face perception skills of young infants, little attention has focused on conditions that enhance versus impair infant face perception. The present studies tested the prediction, generated from the Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH), that face discrimination, which relies on detection of visual featural information, would be impaired in the context of intersensory redundancy provided by audiovisual speech, and enhanced in the absence of intersensory redundancy (unimodal visual and asynchronous audiovisual speech) in early development. Later in development, following improvements in attention, faces should be discriminated in both redundant audiovisual and nonredundant stimulation. Results supported these predictions. Two-month-old infants discriminated a novel face in unimodal visual and asynchronous audiovisual speech but not in synchronous audiovisual speech. By 3 months, face discrimination was evident even during synchronous audiovisual speech. These findings indicate that infant face perception is enhanced and emerges developmentally earlier following unimodal visual than synchronous audiovisual exposure and that intersensory redundancy generated by naturalistic audiovisual speech can interfere with face processing.
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- 2013
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36. Developmental evolution
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Robert Lickliter
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0301 basic medicine ,Heredity ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,Biological Evolution ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Phenotype ,Animals ,Humans ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Growth and Development ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,General Psychology - Abstract
Biologists and psychologists are re-thinking the long-standing premise of genes as the primary cause of development, a view widely embraced in 20th-century biology. This shift in thinking is based in large part on: (1) the growing appreciation of the complex, distributed regulatory dynamics of gene expression; and (2) the growing appreciation of the probabilistic, contingent, and situated nature of development. We now appreciate that what actually unfolds during individual development represents only one of many possibilities. This expanded focus on the developmental process, often referred to as a developmental systems approach, has far-reaching implications for developmental and evolutionary theory, including new ways of thinking about the consequences of activity and experience, the emergence of novel properties or traits, the nature and extent of heredity, and the origins of phenotypic variability. WIREs Cogn Sci 2017, 8:e1422. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1422 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website.
- Published
- 2016
37. Exploring the dynamics of development and evolution: Comment on Blair and Raver (2012)
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Robert Lickliter
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Conceptualization ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social change ,Context (language use) ,Cognition ,Self-control ,Evolutionary psychology ,Child development ,Developmental psychology ,Argument ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
Blair and Raver (2012) have provided an organism-in-environment conceptualization of the development of stress response physiology and its relation to the development of self-regulation. They argue that we must consider the context in which self-regulation and stress reactivity occur to understand their implications for developmental outcome. More generally, they present a cogent argument for why it is necessary to think developmentally when considering the effects of early experience on subsequent physical, emotional, cognitive, and social development. Blair and Raver's article also highlights a persistent challenge for developmental theory--how to make sense of the relationship among the various timescales over which phenotypes develop and change occurs. Their efforts to identify the factors involved in the variability and stability of self-regulation over different timescales demonstrate the dividends of integrating developmental and evolutionary perspectives to better understand the malleability of phenotypic development.
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- 2012
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38. The Integrated Development of Sensory Organization
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Robert Lickliter
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Cognitive science ,Neuronal Plasticity ,business.industry ,Extramural ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sensation ,Brain ,Infant ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Sensory system ,Cognition ,Article ,Perception ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Natural (music) ,business ,Scientific disciplines ,media_common - Abstract
The natural environment provides a flux of concurrent stimulation to all our senses, and the integration of information from different sensory systems is a fundamental feature of perception and cognition. How information from the different senses is integrated has long been of concern to several scientific disciplines, including psychology, cognitive science, and the neurosciences, each with different questions and methodologies. In recent years, a growing body of evidence drawn from these various disciplines suggests that the development of early sensory organization is much more plastic and experience-dependent than was previously realized. In this article, I briefly explore some of these recent advances in our understanding of the development of sensory integration and organization and discuss implications of these advances for the care and management of the preterm infant.
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- 2011
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39. Biased embryos: Prenatal Experience Alters the Postnatal Malleability of Auditory Preferences in Bobwhite Quail
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Christopher Harshaw and Robert Lickliter
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Auditory perception ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,animal structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Imprinting, Psychological ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,biology.animal ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Animals ,Colinus ,Social Behavior ,media_common ,Sensory stimulation therapy ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Preference ,Quail ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,Precocial ,Vocalization, Animal ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Bobwhite quail ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Many precocial birds show a robust preference for the maternal call of their own species before and after hatching. This differential responsiveness to species-specific auditory stimuli by embryos and neonates has been the subject of study for more than four decades, but much remains unknown about the dynamics of this ability. Gottlieb [Gottlieb [1971]. Development of species identification in birds: An enquiry into the prenatal determinants of perception. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.] demonstrated that prenatal exposure to embryonic vocalizations serves to canalize the formation of species-specific preferences in ducklings. Apart from this, little is known about the features of the developmental system that serve to canalize such species-typical preferences, on the one hand, and generate novel behavioral phenotypes, on the other. In the current study, we show that briefly exposing bobwhite quail embryos to a heterospecific Japanese quail (JQ) maternal call significantly enhanced their acquisition of a preference for that call when chicks were provided with subsequent postnatal exposure to the same call. This was true whether postnatal exposure involved playback of the maternal call contingent upon chick contact vocalizations or yoked, non-contingent exposure to the call. Chicks that received both passive prenatal and contingent postnatal exposure to the JQ maternal call redirected their species-typical auditory preference, showing a significant preference for JQ call over the call of their own species. In contrast, chicks receiving only prenatal or only postnatal exposure to the JQ call did not show this redirection of their auditory preference. Our results indicate that prenatal sensory stimulation can significantly bias postnatal responsiveness to social stimuli, thereby altering the course of early learning and memory.
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- 2010
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40. CHOICE IN QUAIL NEONATES: THE ORIGINS OF GENERALIZED MATCHING
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Susan M. Schneider and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Matching (statistics) ,Matching law ,Reinforcement Schedule ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Choice Behavior ,Generalization, Psychological ,Developmental psychology ,Discrimination Learning ,Heating ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Colinus ,Discrimination learning ,Reinforcement ,Research Articles ,biology ,Association Learning ,biology.organism_classification ,Quail ,Animals, Newborn ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Precocial ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Although newborns have surprised scientists with their learning skills, proficiency on concurrent schedules of reinforcement requires (in effect) the ability to integrate and compare behavior-consequence relations over time. Can very young animals obey the quantitative relation that applies to such repeated choices, the generalized matching law? The provenance of the skill is not well understood, and this study provides the first investigation of matching in neonates. Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) hatchlings pecked left and right targets on a touchscreen for heat delivery on a concurrent variable-interval reinforcement schedule. Within 5 days after hatching, the chicks showed sensitivity levels significantly greater than zero, but short of typical adult levels. However, stable sequential patterns emerged almost immediately, including a consistent choose-rich tendency after unreinforced responses, one that entails some degree of temporal integration. These exploratory data suggest that the basic ability to match develops quickly in this precocial species, but that more extensive experience may be required to achieve the higher sensitivities typically seen in adults.
- Published
- 2010
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41. Increasing task difficulty enhances effects of intersensory redundancy: testing a new prediction of the Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis
- Author
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Mariana Vaillant-Molina, Lorraine E. Bahrick, Irina Castellanos, and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Auditory perception ,Visual perception ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Amodal perception ,Developmental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Task analysis ,Facilitation ,Redundancy (engineering) ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Prior research has demonstrated intersensory facilitation for perception of amodal properties of events such as tempo and rhythm in early development, supporting predictions of the Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH). Specifically, infants discriminate amodal properties in bimodal, redundant stimulation but not in unimodal, nonredundant stimulation in early development, whereas later in development infants can detect amodal properties in both redundant and nonredundant stimulation. The present study tested a new prediction of the IRH: that effects of intersensory redundancy on attention and perceptual processing are most apparent in tasks of high difficulty relative to the skills of the perceiver. We assessed whether by increasing task difficulty, older infants would revert to patterns of intersensory facilitation shown by younger infants. Results confirmed our prediction and demonstrated that in difficult tempo discrimination tasks, 5-month-olds perform like 3-month-olds, showing intersensory facilitation for tempo discrimination. In contrast, in tasks of low and moderate difficulty, 5-month-olds discriminate tempo changes in both redundant audiovisual and nonredundant unimodal visual stimulation. These findings indicate that intersensory facilitation is most apparent for tasks of relatively high difficulty and may therefore persist across the lifespan.
- Published
- 2010
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42. The Critical Role of Temporal Synchrony in the Salience of Intersensory Redundancy During Prenatal Development
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Robert Lickliter, Lorraine E. Bahrick, and Mark Jaime
- Subjects
animal structures ,Visual perception ,biology ,Auditory learning ,Stimulus (physiology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Child development ,Quail ,Developmental psychology ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Perceptual learning ,biology.animal ,embryonic structures ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Bobwhite quail - Abstract
We explored the amount and timing of temporal synchrony necessary to facilitate prenatal perceptual learning using an animal model, the bobwhite quail. Quail embryos were exposed to various audiovisual combinations of a bobwhite maternal call paired with patterned light during the late stages of prenatal development and were tested postnatally for evidence of prenatal auditory learning of the familiarized call. Results revealed that a maternal call paired with a single pulse of light synchronized with one note of the five note call was sufficient to facilitate embryos’ prenatal perceptual learning of the entire call. A synchronous note occurring at the onset of the call burst was most effective at facilitating learning. These findings highlight quail embryos’ remarkable sensitivity to temporal synchrony and indicate its role in promoting learning of redundantly specified stimulus properties during prenatal development.
- Published
- 2010
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43. Operant generalization in quail neonates after intradimensional training: Distinguishing positive and negative reinforcement
- Author
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Robert Lickliter and Susan M. Schneider
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Signal Detection, Psychological ,Audiology ,Article ,Generalization, Psychological ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Generalization (learning) ,medicine ,Animals ,Colinus ,Reinforcement ,biology ,Teaching ,Classical conditioning ,General Medicine ,Extinction (psychology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Generalization (Psychology) ,Animals, Newborn ,Excitatory postsynaptic potential ,Conditioning, Operant ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Stimulus control ,Psychology ,Reinforcement, Psychology ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
Operant generalization has been demonstrated in neonates only recently. To investigate the development of intradimensional stimulus control immediately after hatching, northern bobwhite chicks (Colinus virginianus) pecked for brief heat presentations while hearing a high-pitched sound repeated at two constant rates: an S+ tempo signaling a rich reinforcement schedule, alternating with an S- tempo signaling a leaner schedule. Tempo generalization was then assessed in extinction. The expected excitatory gradients were produced after a threshold number of training sessions; unexpectedly, below that threshold, gradients were inhibitory. The chicks' rapidly developing thermoregulatory capability may have resulted in a change from perceived negative reinforcement initially to positive reinforcement later. Given past research showing excitatory gradients after negative reinforcement, we suggest that these results demonstrate that all negative reinforcement is not equivalent, and, further, that classical conditioning effects require consideration.
- Published
- 2010
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44. The Fallacy of Partitioning: Epigenetics' Validation of the Organism-Environment System
- Author
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Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Fallacy ,Value (ethics) ,General Computer Science ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognition ,Biology ,Developmental psychology ,Action (philosophy) ,Perception ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Organism ,media_common - Abstract
Ecological psychologists have long championed the importance of the concept of the organism-environment system and highlighted its value to our understanding of perception, action, and cognition (G...
- Published
- 2009
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45. Stimulus contingency and the malleability of species-typical auditory preferences in Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) hatchlings
- Author
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Christopher Harshaw, Isaac P. Tourgeman, and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
animal structures ,Zoology ,Coturnix ,Imprinting, Psychological ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Social Environment ,Choice Behavior ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Species Specificity ,Developmental Neuroscience ,biology.animal ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Animals ,Colinus ,Maternal Behavior ,Social Behavior ,Hatchling ,biology ,Age Factors ,biology.organism_classification ,Social relation ,Quail ,Auditory Perception ,Precocial ,Vocalization, Animal ,Psychology ,Contingency ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Precocial avian hatchlings are typically highly social and show strong species-typical preferences for the maternal calls of their own species. The influence of social contingencies on the acquisition of species-specific preferences has, however, largely been neglected. We found that exposing bobwhite (BW) quail chicks to a Japanese quail (JQ) call contingent on their own vocalizations for 5 min was sufficient to eliminate their species-typical preference for the BW maternal call. Yoked, noncontingent exposure had no such effect. The introduction of variability to the contingency, but not a lengthening of the training session, was found to engender even higher preferences for the JQ call. Chicks provided with contingent exposure to the JQ call on a variable ratio schedule showed a significant preference for the JQ over the BW maternal call, whereas chicks provided with equivalent fixed ratio exposure did not. These results highlight the role that social interaction and contingency can play in the acquisition and maintenance of species-specific auditory preferences in precocial avian species. 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 50: 460-472, 2008.
- Published
- 2008
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46. Elevated yolk progesterone moderates prenatal heart rate and postnatal auditory learning in bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus)
- Author
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Robert Lickliter, Joshua A. Herrington, and Yvette Rodriguez
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,food.ingredient ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,food ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Heart Rate ,Yolk ,biology.animal ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Animals ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Colinus ,Hatchling ,Incubation ,Progesterone ,biology ,Behavior, Animal ,Hatching ,05 social sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Egg Yolk ,Quail ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Animals, Newborn ,embryonic structures ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,Bobwhite quail ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Previous studies have established that yolk hormones of maternal origin can influence physiology and behavior in birds. However, few studies have examined the effects of maternal gestagens, like progesterone, on chick behavior and physiology. We tested the effects of experimentally elevated egg yolk progesterone on embryonic heart rate and postnatal auditory learning in bobwhite quail hatchlings. Quail chicks were passively exposed to an individual maternal assembly call for 10 min/hr during the 24 hr following hatching. Preference for the familiarized call was tested at 48 hr following hatching in three experimental groups: chicks that received artificially elevated yolk progesterone (P) prior to incubation, vehicle-only controls (V), and non-manipulated controls (C). Resting heart rate of P, V, and C embryos were also measured on prenatal day 17. The resting heart rate of P embryos was significantly higher than both the V and C embryos. Chicks from the P group also showed an enhanced preference for the familiarized bobwhite maternal call when compared to chicks from the C and V groups. Our results indicate that elevated yolk progesterone in pre-incubated bobwhite quail eggs can influence arousal level in bobwhite embryos and postnatal perceptual learning in bobwhite neonates.
- Published
- 2016
47. Using an Animal Model to Explore the Prenatal Origins of Social Development
- Author
-
Robert Lickliter and Lorraine E. Bahrick
- Subjects
Formative assessment ,Animal model ,Social orienting ,Social change ,Lack of knowledge ,Social stimuli ,Psychology ,Social learning ,Social motivation ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Prenatal experience is both a formative and regulatory force in the process of development. As a result, birth is not an adequate starting point for explanations of behavioral development. However, little is currently known regarding the role of prenatal experience in the emergence and development of neonatal social orienting, social motivation, or social learning. Our lack of knowledge in this area is due in part to the very restricted experimental manipulations possible with human fetuses. A comparative approach utilizing animal models provides an essential step in addressing this gap in our knowledge of the development of social responsiveness and providing testable predictions for studies with human fetuses and infants. In this chapter we review animal-based research exploring how aspects of prenatal experience can facilitate the development of postnatal social motivation, social recognition, and social learning. We conclude that infant social responsiveness has its roots in prenatal development and that intersensory redundancy present in the prenatal environment promotes the salience of social stimuli during early postnatal development.
- Published
- 2016
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48. The dynamics of development and evolution: Insights from behavioral embryology
- Author
-
Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Embryology ,Behavior, Animal ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Perspective (graphical) ,Biological Evolution ,Prenatal development ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Instinct ,Empirical research ,Species Specificity ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Dynamics (music) ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Animals ,Precocial ,Psychology ,Developmental Biology ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The perspective that features of species-typical behavior could be traced to experience that occurred prenatally was raised by Zing-Yang Kuo [1921 Journal of Philosophy 18: 645-664] early in the last century and Gilbert Gottlieb subsequently elaborated on and provided empirical support for this idea over the course of more than four decades of innovative psychobiological research. Although we are still a long way from fully understanding the specific pathways and processes by which prenatal experience can influence postnatal development, Gottlieb's research with precocial birds provided significant insights into the conditions and experiences of prenatal development involved in the achievement of species-typical perception and behavior. In particular, his elegant series of studies on the development of species identification in ducklings documented how the features and patterns of recurring prenatal sensory experience (including self-stimulation) guide and constrain the young individual's selective attention, perception, learning, and memory during both prenatal and postnatal periods. I review how this body of research supports the view that the structure and functions of the developing organism and its developmental ecology together form a relationship of mutual influence on the emergence, maintenance, and transformation of species-typical behavior. I also explore how Gottlieb's empirical demonstrations of the prenatal roots of so-called "instinctive" behavior provided a foundation for his conceptual efforts to define the links between developmental and evolutionary change.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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49. Enriched rearing facilitates spatial exploration in northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) neonates
- Author
-
Maria Lazic, Robert Lickliter, and Susan M. Schneider
- Subjects
Time Factors ,animal structures ,Behavior, Animal ,biology ,Ecology ,Spatial Behavior ,Colinus ,biology.organism_classification ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Animals, Newborn ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Space Perception ,Environmental complexity ,Exploratory Behavior ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Spatial learning ,Animals ,Environment Design ,Maze Learning ,Social Behavior ,Short duration ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Rearing with enriched environmental complexity has been shown to enhance spatial exploration and spatial learning, among other benefits. Most studies examining enriched rearing effects have used extended periods of exposure in mammals; little is known about enrichment effects on avian species. We provided objects designed to encourage spatial exploration to socially raised northern bobwhite neonates; controls were socially raised without the enrichment devices. After 3-5 days of exposure, maze performance was assessed for 48 chicks. Chicks in the enriched group showed significantly more spatial activity in the maze than control chicks. These results extend the generality of spatial enrichment effects to birds and to a relatively short duration of enrichment exposure. 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 49: 548-551, 2007.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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50. Thinking About Development: The Value of Animal-Based Research for the Study of Human Development
- Author
-
Lorraine E. Bahrick and Robert Lickliter
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Aging ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Attentional control ,Individual development ,Cognition ,Article ,Human development (humanity) ,Developmental psychology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Perceptual learning ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Selective attention ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Gottlieb promoted the value of a developmental psychobiological systems approach to the study of human development. This approach recognizes the importance of comparative, animal-based research to advancing our understanding of the complexities and dynamics of the process of development. The major contribution of animal developmental studies is their provision of food for thought (hypotheses, not facts) about human development and general principles of development. Here we briefly describe how, guided by Gottlieb's pioneering vision, we have utilized coordinated studies of non-human animal and human infants to begin to identify patterns of selective attention and perceptual processing that are common across species in early development. Our converging findings highlight the importance of multimodal (intersensory) redundancy in guiding and constraining early perceptual learning in avian and mammalian species.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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