Lillard Angeline S, Witherington David C
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4400, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2004 Jan;40(1):95-113. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.40.1.95.
An important issue for understanding early cognition is why very young children's real-world representations do not get confused by pretense events. One possible source of information for children is the pretender's behaviors. Pretender behaviors may vary systematically across real and pretend scenarios, perhaps signaling to toddlers to interpret certain events as not real. Pretender behaviors were examined in 2 experiments in which mothers were asked both to pretend to have a snack and really to have a snack with their 18-month-olds. Episodes were analyzed for condition differences in verbal and nonverbal behaviors, including smiling, looking, laughter, and functional movements. Reliable differences were found across conditions for several variables. In a 3rd experiment, children's apparent understanding of pretense in relation to their mothers' behaviors was examined, and significant associations were found with some of the mothers' behavioral changes but not others. This work provides a first inroad into the issue of how children learn to interpret pretense acts as pretense.
理解早期认知的一个重要问题是,为什么幼儿对现实世界的表征不会被假装事件所混淆。儿童获取信息的一个可能来源是假装者的行为。假装者的行为可能在真实场景和假装场景中系统地变化,这或许向学步儿童发出信号,让他们将某些事件理解为不真实的。在两项实验中对假装者的行为进行了研究,在实验中,母亲们被要求分别与18个月大的孩子假装吃零食和真的吃零食。对这些情节进行了分析,以找出言语和非言语行为在不同条件下的差异,包括微笑、眼神、笑声和功能性动作。在几个变量上发现了不同条件之间的可靠差异。在第三个实验中,研究了儿童对与其母亲行为相关的假装的明显理解,发现与母亲的一些行为变化存在显著关联,但与其他行为变化无关。这项工作为儿童如何学会将假装行为理解为假装这一问题提供了初步的切入点。