GOOD.is
GOOD is a collaboration of individuals, businesses, and nonprofits pushing the world forward. Get involved.
  • Home
  • |
  • Columns ▶
    • BoingBoing on GOOD
    • Joe Ippolito on Business
    • Carol Coletta on Cities
    • Alissa Walker on Design
    • Ben Jervey on the Environment
    • Peter Smith on Food
    • Truman National Security Project on Foreign Policy
    • Picture Show
    • Mark Peters on Language
    • Anne Trubek on Literature
    • See All Columns
  • |
  • Video
  • |
  • Infographics
  • |
  • Community
  • |
  • Events
  • Follow GOOD:
  • twitter
  • flickr
  • facebook
  • youtube
  • rss feed
  • Business
  • |
  • Cities
  • |
  • Culture
  • |
  • Design
  • |
  • Education
  • |
  • Environment
  • |
  • Food
  • |
  • Health
  • |
  • Media
  • |
  • People
  • |
  • Politics
  • |
  • Technology
  • |
  • Transportation
  • 0
  • 2

Breaking! Babies rely on intuition!

  • Posted by: Shagawa
  • on November 24, 2007 at 10:54 am

The recent study from Yale “Social evaluation by preverbal infants” published in Nature is being heralded by mainstream media as a major breakthrough that will advance understanding of human behavior.

“Babies are good judges of character long before they learn to speak, according to a new study. Infants as young as six months preferred characters which helped rather than hindered others in a simple puppet show,” wrote a NewScientist journalist.

The surprising thing to me is that this is news to so many. Of course babies can “judge character.” Humans are born with many abilities and senses for a reason. We can sense danger before we see it. When the hair raises on the back of a neck, it’s the senses interpreting and responding to a potential

If two people repeat the same set of words to us, our internal reaction to that person will not be identical. There are chemicals, body language, and energy at play that will bring about a unique reaction.

On the other hand, individuals begin their re-education at birth. We are socially shaped to rely less on our instincts and perceptions and more on approved values and responses that are demonstrated in our communities, and reinforced through media.

Perhaps next week the big news will be that dogs can be trained to salivate when anticipating a reward.

  • Filed under: General : The Community Board
  • Share
  • Discuss
  • Mark it good!
  • Facebook
  •   Twitter
  • Digg
  • Stumble
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
Direct link to this post:
Send as an Email:
Your email address:
Recipient's email address:
Message:

X
DISCUSSION: 2 Comments
    • Posted by: jessejo
    • on February 2, 2008 at 5:56 pm

    When my daughter was just a few months old, and a very cheerful baby, she would cry and act distressed every time a certain “friend” of my husband was near her. Over time it became clear that this man had a deeply hateful attitude toward just about everyone – even his purported “friends,” and he would happily use anyone to achieve his ends. My daughter knew first!

    • Posted by: mchristopher
    • on November 6, 2009 at 4:33 am

    This is fantastic!  Its so nice to have something like that validated.  Those gut feelings….intuition are a genetic gift! Wouldn’t it be nice to take a refresher course!?

Login or Sign up to discuss this article

Related Content

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Guess Which Animal Is Most Like Humans? (Hint: It's Not Chimps)

    So, here's something: Scientists have determined that while genetic similarities make us closely related to ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Media Befuddled By Fist Bump

    As the Huffington Post reports: The media has a new fixation, and it's Obama's fist ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Why Your Naked Body Shames You So

    For all but the most cavalier among us, nudity is kind of a big deal. It's something we ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Reverend Wright Speaks

    And for once you'll hear more than the condensed-for-maximum-shock soundbites. Barack Obama's "controversial" pastor is going to sit down ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Al-Jazeera

    Al-Jazeera International, the Arab news station's English-language, worldwide news outlet, launched yesterday. It's hard ...
    Read & Discuss

Recent Readers

  • Stephen Pifer
  • JuliaOsovskaya
See all

This Week In Blogs

  • Most Discussed
  • Most GOODMarked
  1. How Thanksgiving Got Its Turkey
  2. Is Newsweek’s Sarah Palin Cover Sexist?
  3. Transparency: The Effects of Bike Commuting on Obesity
  4. Prison and College: California’s Ridiculous Priorities
  5. The GOOD 100: Cowpooling
  6. Are You Raising a Furkid?
  7. Sad or Cute: Hermit Crab Makes Home in Broken Bottle
  8. The Charter for Compassion
  9. Tips on How to Reduce Food Packaging Waste
  10. New School: How the Web Liberalized Liberal Arts Education
  1. The Charter for Compassion
  2. New School: How the Web Liberalized Liberal Arts Education
  3. The GOOD Guide to COP15: The Fire this Time: Copenhagen and the War for the Future
  4. Singularity 101: What Is the Singularity?
  5. Picture Show: Breach
  6. Intermission: Eye-popping 3D Building Projections
  7. Charging Forward with Mission Motor’s Electric Superbike
  8. EyeWriter: Paralyzed Artist Draws with His Eyes
  9. Tips on How to Reduce Food Packaging Waste
  10. The GOOD Guide to COP15: An Introduction

GOOD Magazine
About
|
Join
|
Sign In

Categories

  • Business
  • Cities
  • Culture
  • Design
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Media
  • People
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Transportation

Special Features

  • Blogs
  • Events
  • Infographics
  • Look
  • Picture Show
  • Q&A
  • Video

Community

  • Community Board
  • Member directory
  • Join the Community

Social

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Flickr

Magazine

  • Current issue
  • Back issues
  • Subscribe
  • Gift a gift
  • Renew/Service

GOOD

  • What is GOOD?
  • Make GOOD better
© GOOD Worldwide LLC. - all rights reserved
  • Company details
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • RSS
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Powered by Verkata