Beck Sarah R, Robinson Elizabeth J, Carroll Daniel J, Apperly Ian A
School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Child Dev. 2006 Mar-Apr;77(2):413-26. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00879.x.
Two experiments explored whether children's correct answers to counterfactual and future hypothetical questions were based on an understanding of possibilities. Children played a game in which a toy mouse could run down either 1 of 2 slides. Children found it difficult to mark physically both possible outcomes, compared to reporting a single hypothetical future event, "What if next time he goes the other way ..." (Experiment 1: 3-4-year-olds and 4-5-year-olds), or a single counterfactual event, "What if he had gone the other way ...?" (Experiment 2: 3-4-year-olds and 5-6-year-olds). An open counterfactual question, "Could he have gone anywhere else?," which required thinking about the counterfactual as an alternative possibility, was also relatively difficult.
两项实验探究了儿童对反事实和未来假设性问题的正确回答是否基于对可能性的理解。儿童参与了一个游戏,游戏中有一只玩具老鼠可以从2个滑梯中的任意一个滑下。与报告单个假设的未来事件“如果下次它走另一条路……”(实验1:3至4岁儿童和4至5岁儿童)或单个反事实事件“如果它走了另一条路……会怎样?”(实验2:3至4岁儿童和5至6岁儿童)相比,儿童发现很难实际标记出两种可能的结果。一个开放式反事实问题“它还能去别的地方吗?”,该问题要求将反事实视为一种替代可能性,回答起来也相对困难。