A study by York University researchers reveals that infants as young as six months old know when we’re “playing” them - and they don’t like it. Researchers in York’s Centre for Infancy Studies examined six-and nine-month-old babies’ reactions to a game in which an experimenter was either unable or unwilling to share a toy…
More: continued here
Filed under: Pediatrics on February 10th, 2010
A study by York University researchers reveals that infants as young as six months old know when we’re “playing” them - and they don’t like it. Researchers in York’s Centre for Infancy Studies examined six-and nine-month-old babies’ reactions to a game in which an experimenter was either unable or unwilling to share a toy…
More: continued here
Filed under: Pediatrics on February 10th, 2010
A study by York University researchers reveals that infants as young as six months old know when we’re “playing” them - and they don’t like it. Researchers in York’s Centre for Infancy Studies examined six-and nine-month-old babies’ reactions to a game in which an experimenter was either unable or unwilling to share a toy…
More: continued here
Filed under: Pediatrics on February 10th, 2010
A study by York University researchers reveals that infants as young as six months old know when we’re “playing” them - and they don’t like it. Researchers in York’s Centre for Infancy Studies examined six-and nine-month-old babies’ reactions to a game in which an experimenter was either unable or unwilling to share a toy…
More: continued here
Filed under: Pediatrics on February 10th, 2010
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