Schulz Laura E, Hooppell Catherine, Jenkins Adrianna C
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Child Dev. 2008 Mar-Apr;79(2):395-410. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2007.01132.x.
Three studies look at whether the assumption of causal determinism (the assumption that all else being equal, causes generate effects deterministically) affects children's imitation of modeled actions. These studies show even when the frequency of an effect is matched, both preschoolers (N = 60; M = 56 months) and toddlers (N = 48; M = 18 months) imitate actions more faithfully when modeled actions are deterministically rather than probabilistically effective. A third study suggests that preschoolers' (N = 32; M = 58 months) imitation is affected not just by whether the agent's goal is satisfied but also by whether the action is a reliable means to the goal. Children's tendency to generate variable responses to probabilistically effective modeled actions could support causal learning.
三项研究探讨了因果决定论的假设(即在其他条件相同的情况下,原因以确定性方式产生结果的假设)是否会影响儿童对示范动作的模仿。这些研究表明,即使结果的频率相匹配,当示范动作具有确定性而非概率性效果时,学龄前儿童(N = 60;平均年龄56个月)和学步儿童(N = 48;平均年龄18个月)都会更忠实地模仿动作。第三项研究表明,学龄前儿童(N = 32;平均年龄58个月)的模仿不仅受到主体目标是否实现的影响,还受到该动作是否是实现目标的可靠手段的影响。儿童对概率性有效示范动作产生可变反应的倾向可能有助于因果学习。