This is a well-written, controversial book with a novel structure ... what is the baby's world? This is not the flowering of James, the confusion of ambiguity, but it is not the structure of our story, the inner experience of the past and the future. This is what we can guess, but I guess Rochat is better than most people. (Dina Lew Psychologist 2002-09-01)
Rochat's fun book details the development of social cognition for the first time in young children. In six compact chapters, the author brings the reader to the baby's world ... a good resource ... I highly recommend it. (J. F. Heberle Choice 2001-12-01)
This is a wonderful book, an important book. It makes a theoretical development of human development a new, richer focus. Rochat carefully studies his argument and details the ecological perspective in a clear and concise manner, while providing readers with interesting examples. (University of Oregon Deer Baldwin)
A very thoughtful consideration of how an infant organizes an understanding of the world raises a lot of evidence about the details and will never ignore the overall picture. Loja closes a small gem. (Jerome Bruner, New York University)
About Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Children's Health Human Development Institute (NICHD): NICHD is a global healthcare provider for the development of fetal, infant and child health, the health of mothers, children and families, reproductive biology and population problems in the United States and around the world I am in charge of research and support. Medical rehabilitation For details, please visit NICHD's website. About the National Institute of Health (NIH): NIH is a medical research institution in the United States including 27 laboratories and centers and is an integral part of the US Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the leading Federal agency responsible for the implementation and support of basic, clinical and translational medical research and is studying the causes, treatment, and treatment of common diseases and rare diseases. For more information on NIH and its programs, please visit www.nih.gov.
The theme center outlines the theory of child development for children ages 12 to 24. For information on child care and child rearing for infants from 0 to 2 years old, please refer to the Baby Care & Child Development Center. For childcare and child rearing of preschool children (3 to 7 years old) please see the Childcare & Child Development Center. For information on child rearing and raising children of middle-aged and older children (8 to 11 years old) please visit our mid-term parenting center.