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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth Zack is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth Zack.


Infancy | 2008

Infants' Attention and Responsiveness to Television Increases With Prior Exposure and Parental Interaction

Rachel Barr; Elizabeth Zack; Amaya Garcia; Paul Muentener

This study examined the relation between early television exposure and parental interaction style during infant-directed television programs on 2 outcomes: infant looking time and infant responsiveness. By quasi-experimental design half of the 12- to 18-month-old infants had prior exposure to the program content and the other half did not. Cluster analysis based on parental verbalizations revealed 3 types of parental coviewing style: high, medium, and low scaffold. Looking time was significantly higher for infants previously exposed to these videos than for those who were not. Infant looking time was also significantly higher, and infants responded more, when parents provided high levels of scaffolding in the form of questions and labels or descriptions. The results suggest that both prior exposure and parental style are associated with infant attention and responsiveness to television and have important implications for both parents and television producers.


Merrill-palmer Quarterly | 2010

Infant and Early Childhood Exposure to Adult-Directed and Child-Directed Television Programming: Relations with Cognitive Skills at Age Four

Rachel Barr; Alexis R. Lauricella; Elizabeth Zack; Sandra L. Calvert

This study described the relations among the amount of child-directed versus adult-directed television exposure at ages 1 and 4 with cognitive outcomes at age 4. Sixty parents completed 24-hour television diaries when their children were 1 and 4 years of age. At age 4, their children also completed a series of cognitive measures and parents completed an assessment of their childrens executive functioning skills. High levels of exposure to programs designed for adults during both infancy and at age 4, and high levels of household television use at age 4, were all associated with poorer executive functioning at age 4. High exposure to television programs designed for adults during the preschool years was also associated with poorer cognitive outcomes at age 4. In contrast, exposure to television programs designed for young children at either time point was not associated with any outcome measure at age 4. These results suggest that exposure to child-directed versus adult-directed television content is an important factor in understanding the relation between media exposure and developmental outcomes.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2012

Age-Related Changes in Learning Across Early Childhood: A New Imitation Task

Kelly Dickerson; Peter Gerhardstein; Elizabeth Zack; Rachel Barr

Imitation plays a critical role in social and cognitive development, but the social learning mechanisms contributing to the development of imitation are not well understood. We developed a new imitation task designed to examine social learning mechanisms across the early childhood period. The new task involves assembly of abstract-shaped puzzle pieces in an arbitrary sequence on a magnet board. Additionally, we introduce a new scoring system that extends traditional goal-directed imitation scoring to include measures of both childrens success at copying gestures (sliding the puzzle pieces) and goals (connecting the puzzle pieces). In Experiment 1, we demonstrated an age-invariant baseline from 1.5 to 3.5 years of age, accompanied by age-related changes in success at copying goals and gestures from a live demonstrator. In Experiment 2, we applied our new task to learning following a video demonstration. Imitation performance in the video demonstration group lagged behind that of the live demonstration group, showing a protracted video deficit effect. Across both experiments, children were more likely to copy gestures at earlier ages, suggesting mimicry, and only later copy both goals and gestures, suggesting imitation. Taken together, the findings suggest that different social learning strategies may predominate in imitation learning dependent upon the degree of object affordance, task novelty, and task complexity.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

The Role of Interactional Quality in Learning from Touch Screens during Infancy: Context Matters

Elizabeth Zack; Rachel Barr

Interactional quality has been shown to enhance learning during book reading and play, but has not been examined during touch screen use. Learning to apply knowledge from a touch screen is complex for infants because it involves transfer of learning between a two-dimensional (2D) screen and three-dimensional (3D) object in the physical world. This study uses a touch screen procedure to examine interactional quality measured via maternal structuring, diversity of maternal language, and dyadic emotional responsiveness and infant outcomes during a transfer of learning task. Fifty 15-month-old infants and their mothers participated in this semi-naturalistic teaching task. Mothers were given a 3D object, and a static image of the object presented on a touch screen. Mothers had 5 min to teach their infant that a button on the real toy works in the same way as a virtual button on the touch screen (or vice versa). Overall, 64% of infants learned how to make the button work, transferring learning from the touch screen to the 3D object or vice versa. Infants were just as successful in the 3D to 2D transfer direction as they were in the 2D to 3D transfer direction. A cluster analysis based on emotional responsiveness, the proportion of diverse maternal verbal input, and amount of maternal structuring resulted in two levels of interactional quality: high quality and moderate quality. A logistic regression revealed the level of interactional quality predicted infant transfer. Infants were 19 times more likely to succeed and transfer learning between the touch screen and real object if they were in a high interactional quality dyad, even after controlling for infant activity levels. The present findings suggest that interactional quality between mother and infant plays an important role in making touch screens effective teaching tools for infants’ learning.


British Journal of Development Psychology | 2009

Infant imitation from television using novel touch screen technology.

Elizabeth Zack; Rachel Barr; Peter Gerhardstein; Kelly Dickerson; Andrew N. Meltzoff


Infancy | 2010

Television Viewing Patterns in 6- to 18-Month-Olds: The Role of Caregiver-Infant Interactional Quality.

Ashley Fidler; Elizabeth Zack; Rachel Barr


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2013

15-month-olds' transfer of learning between touch screen and real-world displays: language cues and cognitive loads.

Elizabeth Zack; Peter Gerhardstein; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Rachel Barr


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2013

15-month-olds' transfer of learning between touch screen and real-world displays

Elizabeth Zack; Peter Gerhardstein; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Rachel Barr


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2013

15-month-olds’ transfer of learning between touch screen and real-world displays: language cues and cognitive loads: 15-month-olds’ transfer of learning between touch screen and real-world displays: language cues and cognitive loads

Elizabeth Zack; Peter Gerhardstein; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Rachel Barr


Merrill-palmer Quarterly-journal of Developmental Psychology | 2010

Palmer Quarterly - Infant and Early Childhood Exposure to Adult-Directed and Child-Directed Television Programming: Relations with Cognitive Skills at Age Four

Rachel Barr; Alexis R. Lauricella; Elizabeth Zack; Alexander Calvert

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