Warneken Felix, Chen Frances, Tomasello Michael
Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Child Dev. 2006 May-Jun;77(3):640-63. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00895.x.
Human children 18-24 months of age and 3 young chimpanzees interacted in 4 cooperative activities with a human adult partner. The human children successfully participated in cooperative problem-solving activities and social games, whereas the chimpanzees were uninterested in the social games. As an experimental manipulation, in each task the adult partner stopped participating at a specific point during the activity. All children produced at least one communicative attempt to reengage him, perhaps suggesting that they were trying to reinstate a shared goal. No chimpanzee ever made any communicative attempt to reengage the partner. These results are interpreted as evidence for a uniquely human form of cooperative activity involving shared intentionality that emerges in the second year of life.
18至24个月大的人类儿童和3只幼年黑猩猩与一名成年人类伙伴进行了4项合作活动。人类儿童成功参与了合作性问题解决活动和社交游戏,而黑猩猩对社交游戏不感兴趣。作为一种实验性操作,在每项任务中,成年伙伴在活动的特定时刻停止参与。所有儿童至少进行了一次沟通尝试,试图让他重新参与,这可能表明他们试图恢复一个共同目标。没有一只黑猩猩曾进行任何沟通尝试来让伙伴重新参与。这些结果被解释为一种独特的人类合作活动形式的证据,这种活动涉及在生命的第二年出现的共享意向性。