Do babies understand PHYSICS? Infants are surprised by magic tricks because they understand its basic principles, say scientists
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Conversation is limited to 'mummy' and 'bye bye' and simply standing up unaided is a major achievement. But 11-month-old babies have already mastered the fundamentals of physics.
Baby boys and girls were surprised when a ball seemed to disappear through a solid wall.
Their curiosity did not end there. When they were then given the ball to play with, they repeatedly banged it on a table in an apparent attempt to work out its secret.
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Babies in the study reacted with surprise when objects like this toy car appeared to break the laws of gravity
The babies were similarly perplexed by a toy car that appeared to defy the laws of gravity and float in thin air. And given it to play with later, they repeatedly dropped it on the floor.
Importantly, the babies shown the magic tricks were more interested in playing with the ball than a brand new toy that they had never seen before.
And they did better than others on a learning test, in which they had to link a specific sound to the ball.
This, say the US researchers, suggests that babies learn from the unexpected, something that is important in a world in which we are constantly bombarded with information.
Professor Lisa Feigenson, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, said: 'For young learners, the world is an incredibly complex place filled with dynamic stimuli.
'How do learners know what to focus on and what to learn more about and what to ignore?
'Our research suggests that infants use what they already know about the world to form predictions.
'When these predictions are shown to be wrong, infants use this as a special opportunity for learning.
'When babies are surprised, they learn much better, as though they are taking the occasion to try to figure something out about their world.'
The professor studied 11-month-olds because they were old enough to sit and watch the ball and to pick it up and play with it.
A ball was rolled down a slope and apparently passed through a solid wall in one magic trick in the study
Babies repeatedly droped the car after being shown the magic trick as they attempted to learn what happened
However, previous studies have shown that much younger babies and newborn animals have surprising amounts of knowledge about maths and physics, including whether an object should be able to pass through a solid wall.
Writing in the journal Science, she said that some information may be so fundamental to survival that we are born with it.
Lead author Aimee Stahl said that young babies are 'remarkably sophisticated thinkers'.
She added: 'It's easy to look at a baby and see a blank slate but actually babies have rich, sophisticated expectations about the world.
'Infants are not only equipped with core knowledge about fundamental aspects of the world but, from early in their lives, they harness this knowledge to empower new learning.'
After seeing the ball trick babies would bang it on the table more as they attempted to uncover its secrets
The graphic above shows the reactions of the babies after seeing magic tricks that defied their expectations
The babies in the study were given choices about the toys they would play with after watching a magic trick
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