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Babies explore, adults exploit.

edited September 2010 in General
Found this great little discussion of how a babies brain functions as opposed to an adults... I'm always interested in how our brain works, and how that shapes our behavior, and ultimately our lifestyle (must be the psychologist in me)... what are your guys thoughts on this, is it accurate?
Adults focus on objects that will be most useful to them. But . . . children play with the objects that will teach them the most. In our study, 4-year-olds imagined new possibilities based on just a little data. Adults rely more on what they already know. Babies aren’t trying to learn one particular skill or set of facts; instead, they are drawn to anything new, unexpected or informative.

Part of the explanation for these differing approaches can be found in the brain. The young brain is remarkably plastic and flexible. Brains work because neurons are connected to one another, allowing them to communicate. Baby brains have many more neural connections than adult brains. But they are much less efficient. Over time, we prune away the connections we don’t use, and the remaining ones become faster and more automatic. Moreover, the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that controls the directed, planned, focused kind of intelligence, is exceptionally late to mature, and may not take its final shape until our early 20s.

In fact, our mature brain seems to be programmed by our childhood experiences — we plan based on what we’ve learned as children. Very young children imagine and explore a vast array of possibilities. As they grow older and absorb more evidence, certain possibilities become much more likely and more useful. They then make decisions based on this selective information and become increasingly reluctant to give those ideas up and try something new. Computer scientists talk about the difference between exploring and exploiting — a system will learn more if it explores many possibilities, but it will be more effective if it simply acts on the most likely one.

Babies explore; adults exploit.

Comments

  • edited September 2010
    in a nutshell.. i blame this on education.. for shaping/conditioning the ways we think..=p
  • edited September 2010
    Have you also considered that throughout the human life, the behaviours cycle from being an infant -> adult -> elderly (but require being taken care of like an infant again)
  • edited September 2010
    @illicit good point... that reminds me of that movie Benjamin Button with Brad Pitt (great movie btw)

    @Siuying I took a few Psychology classes when I was at SFU, so I always find these kind of questions really interesting... what do you think has more of an effect on our development - our environment/education, or our genes?

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