Jaswal Vikram K, Lima Olivia K, Small Jenna E
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2009 Feb;102(2):182-95. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2008.04.006. Epub 2008 Jun 16.
When children hear an object referred to with a label that is moderately discrepant from its appearance, they frequently make inferences about that object consistent with the label rather than its appearance. We asked whether 3-year-olds actually believe these unexpected labels (i.e., conversion) or whether their inferences simply reflect a desire to comply with the considerable experimental demands of the induction task (i.e., compliance). Specifically, we asked how likely children would be to pass an unexpected label on to another person who had not been present during the labeling event. Results showed that children who used an unexpected label as the basis for inference passed that label on to another person about as often as they could remember it. This suggests that children's label-based inferences do reflect conversion rather than mere compliance.
当儿童听到一个与物体外观有适度差异的标签被用来指代该物体时,他们常常会做出与标签一致而非与外观一致的关于该物体的推断。我们探究了3岁儿童是真的相信这些意外标签(即转变),还是他们的推断仅仅反映了一种想要满足归纳任务中相当大的实验要求的愿望(即顺从)。具体而言,我们询问儿童将一个意外标签传递给在标签事件发生时不在场的另一个人的可能性有多大。结果表明,那些将意外标签用作推断依据的儿童,传递该标签的频率与他们记住该标签的频率差不多。这表明儿童基于标签的推断确实反映了转变而非仅仅是顺从。