Biro Szilvia, Csibra Gergely, Gergely György
Department of Psychology, Leiden University, Wassenaarseweg 52, 2333 AK Leiden, The Netherlands.
Prog Brain Res. 2007;164:303-22. doi: 10.1016/S0079-6123(07)64017-5.
Infants show very early sensitivity to a variety of behavioral cues (such as self-propulsion, equifinal movement, free variability, and situational adjustment of behavior) that can be exploited when identifying, predicting, and interpreting goal-directed actions of intentional agents. We compare and contrast recent alternative models concerning the role that different types of behavioral cues play in human infants' early understanding of animacy, agency, and intentional action. We present new experimental evidence from violation of expectation studies to evaluate these alternative models on the nature of early development of understanding goal-directedness by human infants. Our results support the view that, while infants initially do not restrict goal attribution to behaviors of agents exhibiting self-propelled motion, they quickly develop such expectations.
婴儿对各种行为线索(如自我推进、等效运动、自由变化和行为的情境调整)表现出非常早期的敏感性,这些线索在识别、预测和解释有意主体的目标导向行为时可以被利用。我们比较并对比了最近关于不同类型行为线索在人类婴儿早期对有生命性、能动性和有意行动理解中所起作用的替代模型。我们从违反预期研究中提供了新的实验证据,以评估这些替代模型关于人类婴儿对目标导向性理解的早期发展本质。我们的结果支持这样一种观点,即虽然婴儿最初并不将目标归因局限于表现出自我推进运动的主体行为,但他们很快就会形成这样的预期。