Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA.
Dev Sci. 2012 Jan;15(1):43-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2011.01096.x. Epub 2011 Oct 28.
Previous research has established that infants are unable to perceive causality until 6¼ months of age. The current experiments examined whether infants' ability to engage in causal action could facilitate causal perception prior to this age. In Experiment 1, 4½-month-olds were randomly assigned to engage in causal action experience via Velcro sticky mittens or not engage in causal action because they wore non-sticky mittens. Both groups were then tested in the visual habituation paradigm to assess their causal perception. Infants who engaged in causal action - but not those without this causal action experience - perceived the habituation events as causal. Experiment 2 used a similar design to establish that 4½-month-olds are unable to generalize their own causal action to causality observed in dissimilar objects. These data are the first to demonstrate that infants under 6 months of age can perceive causality, and have implications for the mechanisms underlying the development of causal perception.
先前的研究已经证实,婴儿在 6 个半月大之前无法感知因果关系。本研究旨在探讨婴儿进行因果行动的能力是否能在这之前促进他们对因果关系的感知。在实验 1 中,4 个半月大的婴儿被随机分配到两组:一组通过魔术贴手套参与因果行动体验,另一组则因为戴了非魔术贴手套而没有参与因果行动。然后,两组婴儿都在视觉习惯化范式中接受测试,以评估他们的因果感知能力。进行因果行动的婴儿——而不是没有这种因果行动体验的婴儿——将习惯化事件视为有因果关系的。实验 2 采用了类似的设计,以证明 4 个半月大的婴儿无法将自己的因果行动推广到观察到的不同物体的因果关系中。这些数据首次表明,6 个月以下的婴儿能够感知因果关系,这对因果感知发展的机制具有重要意义。