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Family Relationships, Cognitive Science, Interpersonal Relations - Psychology, Psychology of Education, Child & Infant Psychology & Psychiatry, Developmental Psychology, Parenting - General & Miscellaneous, Infants & Toddlers - Infants, Relationships - In
Joint Attention by Chris Moore,  Philip J. Dunham; with a foreword by Jerome Bruner β€” book cover

Joint Attention

by Chris Moore, Philip J. Dunham; with a foreword by Jerome Bruner
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Overview

It is perhaps no exaggeration to suggest that all of what is intrinsically human experience is grounded in its shared nature. Joint attention to objects and events in the world provides the initial means whereby infants can start to share experiences with others and negotiate shared meanings. It provides a context for the development of both knowledge about the world and about others as experiencers. It plays a central role in the development of the young child's understanding of both the social and nonsocial worlds and in the development of the communicative interplay between child and adult. The first devoted to this important topic, this volume explores how joint attention first arises, its developmental course, its role in communication and social understanding, and the ways in which disruptions in joint attention may be implicated in a variety of forms of abnormal development including autism.

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Book Details

Published
April 12, 1995
Publisher
Hillsdale, N.J. : Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1995.
Pages
296
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780805814378

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