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The developmental origin of metacognition

Brinck, Ingar LU orcid and Liljenfors, Rikard LU (2013) In Infant and Child Development 22(1). p.85-101
Abstract
We explain metacognition as a management of cognitive resources that does not necessitate algorithmic strategies or metarepresentation. When pragmatic, world-directed actions cannot reduce the distance to the goal, agents engage in epistemic action directed at cognition. Such actions often are physical and involve other people, and so are open to observation. Taking a dynamic systems approach to development, we suggest that implicit and perceptual metacognition emerges from dyadic reciprocal interaction. Early intersubjectivity allows infants to internalize and construct rudimentary strategies for monitoring and control of their own and others’ cognitions by emotion and attention. The functions of initiating, maintaining, and achieving... (More)
We explain metacognition as a management of cognitive resources that does not necessitate algorithmic strategies or metarepresentation. When pragmatic, world-directed actions cannot reduce the distance to the goal, agents engage in epistemic action directed at cognition. Such actions often are physical and involve other people, and so are open to observation. Taking a dynamic systems approach to development, we suggest that implicit and perceptual metacognition emerges from dyadic reciprocal interaction. Early intersubjectivity allows infants to internalize and construct rudimentary strategies for monitoring and control of their own and others’ cognitions by emotion and attention. The functions of initiating, maintaining, and achieving turns make proto-conversation a productive platform for developing metacognition. It enables caregiver and infant to create shared routines for epistemic actions that permit training of metacognitive skills. The adult is of double epistemic use to the infant – as a teacher that comments on and corrects the infant’s efforts, and as the infant’s cognitive resource in its own right. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
metacognitive skills, epistemic action, intersubjectivity, reciprocal interaction, attention, emotion
in
Infant and Child Development
volume
22
issue
1
pages
85 - 101
publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
external identifiers
  • wos:000315091700007
  • scopus:84873988498
ISSN
1522-7219
DOI
10.1002/icd.1749
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
6c878cf0-5370-4fa1-8f22-3a15dc3d0b02 (old id 2220206)
alternative location
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/icd.1749/pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:56:45
date last changed
2022-04-28 03:03:14
@article{6c878cf0-5370-4fa1-8f22-3a15dc3d0b02,
  abstract     = {{We explain metacognition as a management of cognitive resources that does not necessitate algorithmic strategies or metarepresentation. When pragmatic, world-directed actions cannot reduce the distance to the goal, agents engage in epistemic action directed at cognition. Such actions often are physical and involve other people, and so are open to observation. Taking a dynamic systems approach to development, we suggest that implicit and perceptual metacognition emerges from dyadic reciprocal interaction. Early intersubjectivity allows infants to internalize and construct rudimentary strategies for monitoring and control of their own and others’ cognitions by emotion and attention. The functions of initiating, maintaining, and achieving turns make proto-conversation a productive platform for developing metacognition. It enables caregiver and infant to create shared routines for epistemic actions that permit training of metacognitive skills. The adult is of double epistemic use to the infant – as a teacher that comments on and corrects the infant’s efforts, and as the infant’s cognitive resource in its own right.}},
  author       = {{Brinck, Ingar and Liljenfors, Rikard}},
  issn         = {{1522-7219}},
  keywords     = {{metacognitive skills; epistemic action; intersubjectivity; reciprocal interaction; attention; emotion}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{85--101}},
  publisher    = {{John Wiley & Sons Inc.}},
  series       = {{Infant and Child Development}},
  title        = {{The developmental origin of metacognition}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/icd.1749}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/icd.1749}},
  volume       = {{22}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}