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January 7, 2005
Volume 42, No. 65

features

A year in the life
Babes in toyland, and scientists, too: Unraveling the mysteries of human development
Centuries of cartography trace path of Iowa from territory to statehood

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University to celebrate legacy of MLK, Jr.
Vice President Jones honored by rights commission for work in education access
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The University of Iowa

The University of Iowa

Babes in toyland, and scientists, too: Unraveling the mysteries of human development


Toddler plays with toy car and horse
Henry Schoon, an 11-month-old study participant in Professor Lisa Oakes’ infant cognition research, manipulates toy cars and horses as research assistants record his reactions to learn how babies categorize objects. Henry is the son of University Relations Publications editor Amy Schoon and photographer Tim Schoon, Photos by Tim Schoon.
 

Pick up a daily newspaper. Turn on the evening news. Flip through any parenting magazine.

You’re bound to come across reports such as “new research shows that experience with music is important for brain development” or “a study reveals that children can understand the difference between right and wrong at a much earlier age than we thought.”

At The University of Iowa, researchers make exactly these types of discoveries in the Children’s Research Laboratory. Housed in Spence Laboratories, the research laboratory is made up of the labs of several psychology professors who share a common interest in figuring out how human beings develop.

The professors also share a giant database of the names of every child born in Johnson and Linn counties.

Thousands of area children come to the Children’s Research Laboratory each year to participate in studies. Children—from infants to adolescents—spend time in the labs playing with toys, watching pictures on a monitor, pointing out and naming objects, talking, and moving, while video cameras and copious note takers observe.

Developmental psychologists joined forces to open the research lab in the early 1990s. Jodie Plumert, professor of psychology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and one of the lab’s first researchers, says the basic goal has remained the same—to learn more about how children develop. Faculty members say they owe much of the success of their research to two groups of people: their research assistants and the families who participate in the studies.

Man sitting on the floor looking over the work of a young child
John Spencer, associate professor of psychology, watches 4-year-old Alison Luck play in Spencer’s spatial planning and memory lab. Spencer is investigating how people maintain location information in working memory. Alison is the daughter of Spencer’s fellow psychology faculty members, Lisa Oakes and Steven Luck. For more information about participating in a child research study, contact the psychology department at (33)5-2419 or e-mail Lisa Oakes at lisa-oakes@uiowa.edu. To learn more about each researcher and specific studies, go to www.psychology.uiowa.edu/research.html and click on a researcher’s name; most researchers have their own web pages. The psychology department web site lists researchers and lab projects in six training areas, including developmental psychology; behavioral and cognitive neuroscience; clinical psychology; health psychology; cognition and perception; and personality and social psychology.

Graduate and undergraduate assistants are involved in all parts of the research, from testing children to coding data and even designing studies.

“It’s an outstanding opportunity for students to get hands-on experience with research,” Plumert says. “Our developmental psychology program has been ranked among the top undergraduate programs in the country. One reason for that may be the strong involvement of undergrads in our research.”

Researchers also heap praise on their young participants’ parents. In most cases, the compensation isn’t much more than a small toy and a “thank you.” Without parents’ willingness or their time and effort, these studies simply wouldn’t be possible, says Lisa Oakes, professor of psychology.

Oakes and several other researchers even sign up their own children for one another’s studies.

“One thing that happens, I think, is that parents think it’s fun to know that their baby—who means the world to them—is also so important to someone else,” Oakes says.

The following is a list of developmental researchers involved with the Children’s Research Laboratory, along with information about their specific interest areas:

• Grazyna Kochanska, professor of psychology, follows the same group of children from infancy to school-age, focusing on early development of conscience—how children come to distinguish between right and wrong, cultivate feelings of guilt and empathy, and behave according to family rules.

• Bob McMurray, assistant professor of psychology, works with a range of subjects, from infants to adults, examining language perception and how humans develop particular speech sounds and speech categories. The research may help educators better teach language skills and diagnose language problems earlier.

• Oakes explores how babies make sense of the world—how they grow from a newborn bombarded with new sights and sounds to a 14-month-old who points to a furry thing and says “cat.” Oakes tracks how much a baby can remember and how that ability changes over time.

• Plumert looks at factors that put children at risk for bicycling accidents; her child safety research determines what sort of immature cognitive skills put children in danger. Understanding that could help parents better understood how to keep their children accident-free.

• Larissa Samuelson, assistant professor of psychology, focuses on the way toddlers learn to name and categorize new kinds of objects, and how they figure out the difference between a “solid” and a “nonsolid” based on shape, texture, color, and what they already know about familiar objects.

• John Spencer, associate professor of psychology, studies how children remember where objects are located and how these memory abilities change with age. His research projects cover memory, attention, and motor control development.

• Scott Robinson, associate professor of psychology, researches the development of motor abilities in premature and full-term newborn infants in University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. His specific research interests include sensation and learning in the womb, neural and biomechanical control, and development and evolution of action.

As the newest member of the Children’s Research Lab team, McMurray appreciates his UI colleagues’ particular take on developmental research.

“People here are focused not so much on describing what young kids do at ages 4, 5, and 6, and how they change over time, as on figuring out what processes are responsible for that change,” McMurray says. “It’s really a dynamic atmosphere here, working with people on the cutting edge in the field.”

by Amy Schoon

 

 

Published by University Relations Publications. Copyright The University of Iowa 2005. All rights reserved.
   

 

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