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" Visual guidance is, however, completely impossible in the case of facial imitation. Infants can see the adult's face but cannot see their own faces. They can feel their own faces move but have no access to the feelings of movement in the other. By what... "
The Body and the Self - Page 49
edited by - 1998 - 384 pages
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Annual Progress in Child Psychiatry and Child Development 1998

Margaret E. Hertzig, Ellen A. Farber - Child development - 1999 - 430 pages
...However, for the case of facial imitation, a mechanism based on intramodal guidance would be useless. Infants can see the adult's face but cannot see their...seen but unfelt movements of the other? Classical theories such as Piaget's (1962) answered this question through learning experiences with mirrors and...
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The Analogical Mind: Perspectives from Cognitive Science

Dedre Gentner, Keith J. Holyoak, Boicho N. Kokinov - Psychology - 2001 - 562 pages
...Moore 1983). Meltzoff and Moore (1997) describe the essential puzzle of facial imitation as follows: "Infants can see the adult's face but cannot see their...with the seen but unfelt movements of the other?" (p. 180). Meltzoff and Moore suggest that the solution to this puzzle depends on the appreciation of...
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Perspectives on Imitation: Imitation, human development, and culture

Susan L. Hurley, Nick Chater - Animal behavior - 2005 - 563 pages
...scientists and neuroscientists are struck by the correspondence problem in imitation. Infants can see an adult's face but cannot see their own faces. They can feel their own face move but have no access to the feeling of movement in others. Facial imitation exposes the gap...
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