Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Peekaboo

Game played primarily with babies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peekaboo
Remove ads
Remove ads

Peekaboo (also spelled peek-a-boo) is a form of play played with an infant. To play, one player hides their face, pops back into the view of the other, and says Peekaboo!, sometimes followed by I see you! There are many variations: for example, where trees are involved, "Hiding behind that tree!" is sometimes added. Another variation involves saying "Where's the baby?" while the face is covered and "There's the baby!" when uncovering the face.

Thumb
Two children playing peekaboo (1895 painting by Georgios Jakobides)

Peekaboo uses a joke-like structure: surprise, balanced with expectation.[1]

Linguist Iris Nomikou has compared the game to a dialogue given the predictable back-and-forth pattern.[2] Other researchers have called the game “protoconversation" – a way to teach an infant the timing and the structure of social exchanges.[3]

Remove ads

Object permanence

Thumb
Peekaboo is a prime example of an object permanence test in childhood cognition.[4]

Peekaboo is thought by developmental psychologists to demonstrate an infant's inability to understand object permanence.[5] Object permanence is an important stage of cognitive development for infants. In early sensorimotor stages, the infant is completely unable to comprehend object permanence. Psychologist Jean Piaget conducted experiments with infants which led him to conclude that this awareness was typically achieved at eight to nine months of age.[6] He said that infants before this age are too young to understand object permanence. A lack of object permanence can lead to A-not-B errors, where children reach for a thing at a place where it should not be.[citation needed]

Remove ads

See also

References

Further reading

Loading content...
Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads