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Comparative Study

| Published: September 25, 2015

Gibson’s Ecological Theory of Development and Affordances: A Brief Review

Mina Khatibi

PhD Student, Department of Educational Psychology, Shiraz University, Dubai, UAE Google Scholar More about the auther

, Razieh Sheikholeslami

Professor of Educational Psychology, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran Google Scholar More about the auther

DIP: 18.01.054/20150204

DOI: 10.25215/0204.054

ABSTRACT

This review describes the key ideas of the influential psychologist Eleanor J. Gibson, developed over 70 years of research with infants, children, adults, and a wide range of nonhuman species. Gibson’s ecological approach to perceptual learning and development describes how perception—extracting meaningful information from the environment to guide actions adaptively—improves with experience, the acquisition of new means of exploration, and the development of new perception-action systems (Adolph and Kretch).
The Gibson’s ecological theory is a theory of human development that was created by American psychologist Eleanor J. Gibson during the 1960s and 1970s. Gibson emphasized the importance of environment and context in learning. Perception is important because it allows humans to adapt to their environment. Gibson stated that children learn to detect information that specifies objects, events, and layouts in the world that they can use for their daily activities (Miller, 2002).
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Mina Khatibi @ dr_tomaraei@yahoo.com

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Article Overview

ISSN 2348-5396

ISSN 2349-3429

18.01.054/20150204

10.25215/0204.054

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Published in   Volume 02, Issue 4, July-September, 2015