Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, USA.
Dev Sci. 2010 Mar;13(2):370-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2009.00905.x.
Recent work in embodied cognition has proposed that representations and actions are inextricably linked. The current study examines a developmental account of this relationship. Specifically, we propose that children's actions are foundational for novel representations. Thirty-two preschoolers, aged 3.4 to 5.7 years, were asked to solve a set of simple gear-system problems. Participants' motions and verbalizations were coded to establish the strategies they used. The preschoolers initially solved the problems by simulating the turning and pushing of the gears. Subsequently, most participants discovered a new representation of the problems: the turning direction of the gears alternates. Results show that the number of actions that embodied alternation information, during their simulation of the system, predicted the later emergence of the higher-order representation (i.e. that the gears alternate turning direction). Thus, it appears that the preschoolers discovered a new representation based on their own actions. These results are consistent with the developmental embodiment hypothesis: actions are central to the emergence of new representations.
近年来,具身认知领域的研究提出,表象和动作是不可分割地联系在一起的。本研究考察了这种关系的发展解释。具体来说,我们提出儿童的动作是新表象的基础。32 名 3.4 至 5.7 岁的学龄前儿童被要求解决一组简单的齿轮系统问题。对参与者的动作和言语进行编码,以确定他们使用的策略。学龄前儿童最初通过模拟齿轮的转动和推动来解决问题。随后,大多数参与者发现了一个新的问题表象:齿轮的转动方向交替。结果表明,在模拟系统时,体现交替信息的动作数量,预测了更高阶表象(即齿轮交替转动方向)的后期出现。因此,似乎是学龄前儿童基于自己的动作发现了一个新的表象。这些结果与发展具身认知假说一致:动作是新表象出现的核心。