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The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats

Since Hunt's (1941) claim that he had introduced · a new field into the laboratory study of the animal - its 1• life history - there has been a spate of work in which the effects of many different kinds of variation have been studied. Though one may question the validity of Hunt's claim (see, for ex...

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Main Author: Du Preez, Peter Derek
Other Authors: Professor K. Danziger
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Psychology 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Du Preez, Peter Derek
author2 Professor K. Danziger
author_browse Du Preez, Peter Derek
Professor K. Danziger
author_facet Professor K. Danziger
Du Preez, Peter Derek
author_sort Du Preez, Peter Derek
collection Thesis
description Since Hunt's (1941) claim that he had introduced · a new field into the laboratory study of the animal - its 1• life history - there has been a spate of work in which the effects of many different kinds of variation have been studied. Though one may question the validity of Hunt's claim (see, for example, the early work of Conradi on singing birds, 1909) there is no doubt that this study of the effects of early food deprivation on subsequent hoarding has encouraged and perhaps given rise to a great number of other studies in this field. The importance of influences in childhood has long been acknowledged by authorities as diverse as Rousseau and Freud. The authority of embryological studies also lent weight to the opinion that early influence, by affecting development at its most formative and plastic period, might have more widespread and radical effects than equivalent influences later in life. In particular, it was supposed that traumatic experiences at an early stage of life might have results which were both more persistent and more extensive than t~aumatic experiences at a later stage. Again, the embryological analogy with its critical periods before structures became determined seemed to support this view. It is quite possible that all this is true, though it has been very imperfectly demonstrated. It is quite possible that there are psychological organisers which must act at certain critical periods of development; and it is quite possible that lack of these organisers will cause grave disorders in development. It is also possible that psychological lesions incurred early in life, by striking at the corner atones of psychological development, can cause very widespread effects.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:01.081Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40243 The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats Du Preez, Peter Derek Professor K. Danziger Psychology Since Hunt's (1941) claim that he had introduced · a new field into the laboratory study of the animal - its 1• life history - there has been a spate of work in which the effects of many different kinds of variation have been studied. Though one may question the validity of Hunt's claim (see, for example, the early work of Conradi on singing birds, 1909) there is no doubt that this study of the effects of early food deprivation on subsequent hoarding has encouraged and perhaps given rise to a great number of other studies in this field. The importance of influences in childhood has long been acknowledged by authorities as diverse as Rousseau and Freud. The authority of embryological studies also lent weight to the opinion that early influence, by affecting development at its most formative and plastic period, might have more widespread and radical effects than equivalent influences later in life. In particular, it was supposed that traumatic experiences at an early stage of life might have results which were both more persistent and more extensive than t~aumatic experiences at a later stage. Again, the embryological analogy with its critical periods before structures became determined seemed to support this view. It is quite possible that all this is true, though it has been very imperfectly demonstrated. It is quite possible that there are psychological organisers which must act at certain critical periods of development; and it is quite possible that lack of these organisers will cause grave disorders in development. It is also possible that psychological lesions incurred early in life, by striking at the corner atones of psychological development, can cause very widespread effects. 2024-07-02T10:33:29Z 2024-07-02T10:33:29Z 1962 2024-06-25T11:56:43Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40243 eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Psychology
Du Preez, Peter Derek
The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
title_full The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
title_fullStr The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
title_full_unstemmed The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
title_short The persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
title_sort persistance of the effects of certain aspects of infantile experience on the behaviour of adult rats
topic Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40243
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