Raman Lakshmi, Gelman Susan A
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, 525 East University Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1109, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2005 Jan;41(1):171-82. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.41.1.171.
The authors conducted 4 studies suggesting that children attribute different modes of transmission to genetic disorders and contagious illnesses. Study 1 presented preschoolers through 5th graders and adults with "switched-at-birth" scenarios for various disorders. Study 2 presented preschoolers with the same disorders but used contagion links in a contagion context. Studies 3 and 4 presented preschoolers and adults with novel (fictitious) illnesses to determine which cues participants would use to differentiate the modes of transmission. In the presence of kinship cues, children distinguished genetic disorders from contagious illnesses, but in the presence of contagion cues, preschoolers selectively applied contagious links primarily to contagious illnesses. With novel illnesses, preschoolers and adults inferred that permanent illnesses were more likely to be transmitted by birth parents than by contagion. These results suggest that by the preschool years, children recognize that not all disorders are transmitted exclusively through germ contagion.
作者进行了4项研究,结果表明儿童对遗传疾病和传染性疾病的传播方式有不同的认知。研究1向学龄前儿童、五年级学生和成年人呈现了各种疾病的“出生时被调换”情景。研究2向学龄前儿童呈现了相同的疾病,但在传染情境中使用了传染关联。研究3和研究4向学龄前儿童和成年人呈现了新的(虚构的)疾病,以确定参与者会使用哪些线索来区分传播方式。在存在亲属关系线索的情况下,儿童能够区分遗传疾病和传染性疾病,但在存在传染线索的情况下,学龄前儿童主要将传染关联选择性地应用于传染性疾病。对于新出现的疾病,学龄前儿童和成年人推断,永久性疾病更有可能由亲生父母遗传,而非通过传染。这些结果表明,到学龄前阶段,儿童认识到并非所有疾病都仅通过病菌传染传播。