Barr Rachel, Muentener Paul, Garcia Amaya
Department of Psychology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA.
Dev Sci. 2007 Nov;10(6):910-21. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2007.00641.x.
During the second year of life, infants exhibit a video deficit effect. That is, they learn significantly less from a televised demonstration than they learn from a live demonstration. We predicted that repeated exposure to televised demonstrations would increase imitation from television, thereby reducing the video deficit effect. Independent groups of 6- to 18-month-olds were exposed to live or videotaped demonstrations of target actions. Imitation of the target actions was measured 24 hours later. The video segment duration was twice that of the live presentation. Doubling exposure ameliorated the video deficit effect for 12-month-olds but not for 15- and 18-month-olds. The 6-month-olds imitated from television but did not demonstrate a video deficit effect at all, learning equally well from a live and video demonstration. Findings are discussed in terms of the perceptual impoverishment theory and the dual representation theory.
在生命的第二年,婴儿表现出视频缺失效应。也就是说,他们从电视演示中学到的东西比从现场演示中学到的要少得多。我们预测,反复接触电视演示会增加对电视的模仿,从而减少视频缺失效应。将6至18个月大的婴儿分为独立组,让他们观看目标动作的现场或录像演示。24小时后测量对目标动作的模仿情况。视频片段的时长是现场演示的两倍。增加接触次数改善了12个月大婴儿的视频缺失效应,但对15个月和18个月大的婴儿没有效果。6个月大的婴儿从电视中进行模仿,但根本没有表现出视频缺失效应,从现场演示和视频演示中学得同样好。研究结果根据感知贫乏理论和双重表征理论进行了讨论。