Cognitive Development
Promoting Imitation & Symbolic Play
WiseTip: CD-PLY-M0003-I01A

Look at your baby and make slow, repeated movements so that your baby can process your actions or sounds. Make expressions with your face. For example, stick out your tongue at your baby, and watch to see if your baby imitates you.

WHY IT MATTERS

Researchers have posited that mirroring back behaviour is emotionally pleasing to infants and facilitates further communication.

This to-and-fro imitative interaction promotes communication and builds bonds between the adult and child.

Newborns as young as 42 minutes old match gestures shown to them, including tongue protrusion and mouth opening.

This is remarkable because infants cannot yet see their own faces, and have never seen their reflection in a mirror. Yet, they can map from the behaviour of the person they observe and produce the same actions. Neuroscience findings have indeed shown that when babies see others produce actions with a particular body part, their brains are activated correspondingly.
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  1. Meltzoff A. N. (2007). The 'like me' framework for recognizing and becoming an intentional agent. Acta Psychologica, 124(1), 26–43.

Studies have found that child-directed actions produce greater imitation than adult-directed actions.

Hence, imitating a child is more effective in promoting imitation skills than expecting the child to imitate an adult.

Read more at CD-PLY-C02.