Luo Yuyan, Baillargeon Renée, Brueckner Laura, Munakata Yuko
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois, 603 E. Daniel, Champaign, IL 61820, USA.
Cognition. 2003 Jul;88(3):B23-32. doi: 10.1016/s0010-0277(03)00045-3.
The present research examined two alternative interpretations of violation-of-expectation findings that young infants can represent hidden objects. One interpretation is that, when watching an event in which an object becomes hidden behind another object, infants form a prediction about the event's outcome while both objects are still visible, and then check whether this prediction was accurate. The other interpretation is that infants' initial representations of hidden objects are weak and short-lived and as such sufficient for success in most violation-of-expectation tasks (as objects are typically hidden for only a few seconds at a time), but not more challenging tasks. Five-month-old infants succeeded in reasoning about the interaction of a visible and a hidden object even though (1) the two objects were never simultaneously visible, and (2) a 3- or 4-min delay preceded the test trials. These results provide evidence for robust representations of hidden objects in young infants.
本研究考察了对违背预期结果的两种不同解释,即幼儿能够表征隐藏物体。一种解释是,当观看一个物体被隐藏在另一个物体后面的事件时,婴儿在两个物体都可见时对事件结果形成预测,然后检查这个预测是否准确。另一种解释是,婴儿对隐藏物体的初始表征是微弱且短暂的,因此在大多数违背预期任务中足以成功(因为物体通常一次只隐藏几秒钟),但在更具挑战性的任务中则不然。五个月大的婴儿成功地对一个可见物体和一个隐藏物体的相互作用进行了推理,尽管(1)两个物体从未同时可见,并且(2)在测试试验之前有3到4分钟的延迟。这些结果为幼儿对隐藏物体的稳健表征提供了证据。