Sussman A L
Department of Psychology, Yale University, P.O. Box 208205, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2001 Jun;79(2):115-38. doi: 10.1006/jecp.2000.2575.
Age differences in reality monitoring of interactive events were examined among 4-year-olds, 8-year-olds, 12-year-olds, and adults. Participants engaged in some interactions and imagined others. Afterward, they were asked to determine whether each action was performed, imagined, or new. This memory test was repeated 1 week later. The 4-year-olds had more difficulty discriminating imagined actions than the two oldest age groups. Imagined actions were more often confused with performed ones than the reverse, though this bias was significant only for the two younger age groups. Reality monitoring decreased over time, especially for imagined items. Activities in which the participant was the agent of action were discriminated better than those in which someone else was the agent of action. Object use during the activity increased the discrimination of imagined actions, especially after the delay. Similarity among actions had no effect. Implications for child eyewitness testimony are discussed.
研究人员对4岁、8岁、12岁儿童及成年人在交互式事件现实监控方面的年龄差异进行了调查。参与者进行了一些互动,并想象了其他互动。之后,他们被要求确定每个动作是实际执行的、想象的还是新出现的。这项记忆测试在1周后重复进行。4岁儿童在区分想象动作方面比两个年龄较大的年龄组更困难。想象动作比实际执行动作更容易被混淆,尽管这种偏差仅在两个较年轻的年龄组中显著。随着时间的推移,现实监控能力下降,尤其是对于想象的项目。参与者作为动作执行者的活动比其他人作为动作执行者的活动区分得更好。活动期间的物体使用增加了对想象动作的区分,尤其是在延迟之后。动作之间的相似性没有影响。文中还讨论了对儿童目击证人证词的影响。