4.1 Article

Simplicity and validity in infant research

Journal

COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
Volume 63, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cogdev.2022.101213

Keywords

Infant; Social cognition; Puppets; Construct validity; Methods

Funding

  1. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

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Researchers often use simplified, animated, or artificial stimuli to study infants' understanding of abstract concepts, which raises questions about the validity of the results. While simplified stimuli offer stronger experimental control and more precise inferences, there is a tradeoff between measurement validity and ecological validity.
Infancy researchers often use highly simplified, animated, or otherwise artificial stimuli to study infant's understanding of abstract concepts including causality or even prosociality. The use of these simplified stimuli have led to questions about the validity of the resulting empirical findings. Do simplified stimuli effectively communicate abstract concepts to infants? Even if they do, why not use stimuli more like what infants encounter in their everyday lives? Here we make explicit the underlying logic of using simplified stimuli in studies with infants: Simplified stimuli allow for stronger experimental control and therefore more precise inferences compared to more complex, uncontrolled, naturally occurring events. We discuss the inherent tradeoff between measurement validity and ecological validity, offer three strategies for assessing the validity of simplified stimuli, and then apply those strategies to the increasingly common use of simplified stimuli to assess the development of complex social concepts in the infant mind. Ultimately, we conclude that while concerns about the validity of experiments using simplified stimuli are founded, results from such studies should not be dismissed purely on ecological grounds.

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