Williamson Rebecca A, Meltzoff Andrew N
Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, P.O. Box 5010, Atlanta, GA 30302 USA, Telephone: 404-413-6219, ,
Cogn Dev. 2011 Jul;26(3):260-268. doi: 10.1016/j.cogdev.2011.04.002.
Young children learn from others' examples, and they do so selectively. We examine whether the efficacy of prior experiences influences children's imitation. Thirty-six-month-olds had initial experience on a causal learning task either by performing the task themselves or by watching an adult perform it. The nature of the experience was manipulated such that the actor had either an easy or a difficult experience completing the task. Next, a second adult demonstrated an innovative technique for completing it. Children who had a difficult first-person experience, and those who had witnessed another person having difficulty, were significantly more likely to adopt and imitate the adult's innovation than those who had or witnessed an easy experience. Children who observed another were also more likely to imitate than were those who had the initial experience themselves. Imitation is influenced by prior experience, both when it is obtained through one's own hands-on motor manipulation and when it derives from observing the acts of others.
幼儿通过他人的榜样来学习,并且他们的学习是有选择性的。我们研究先前经验的效果是否会影响儿童的模仿行为。36个月大的儿童在一项因果学习任务上有初始经验,他们要么自己执行任务,要么观看成人执行任务。经验的性质被加以操控,使得执行者完成任务时要么经历轻松,要么经历困难。接下来,另一位成人展示了一种完成该任务的创新技巧。有过困难的第一人称经验的儿童,以及目睹他人经历困难的儿童,比那些有过或目睹轻松经验的儿童更有可能采用并模仿成人的创新方法。观察他人的儿童也比自己有初始经验的儿童更有可能进行模仿。模仿会受到先前经验的影响,无论是通过自己动手操作获得的经验,还是通过观察他人行为获得的经验。