Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Psychol Bull. 2013 Jan;139(1):40-4. doi: 10.1037/a0030151.
The review by Lillard et al. (2013) highlighted the need for additional research to better clarify the nature of the relationship between pretend play and development. However, the authors did not provide a proposal for how to structure the direction of this future work. Here, we provide a possible framework for generating additional research. This theoretical proposal is based on recent computational approaches to cognition, in which counterfactual reasoning plays a central role in causal learning. We propose that pretend play initially emerges as a product of the cognitive mechanisms underlying human learning and then feeds back to become critical for enhancing the optimal functioning of these same processes. More specifically, we argue that pretending is in fact 1 of several forms of counterfactual reasoning, which is essential to causal cognition-and that the act of engaging in pretend scenarios may provide early opportunities to practice the skills that were initially responsible for its appearance. Here, we provide a brief overview of this theoretical framework, consider how these ideas may be integrated with the previous work covered in Lillard et al.'s (2013) review, and suggest some empirically testable questions to direct future directions.
莱尔德等人(2013)的评论强调了需要进行更多的研究,以更好地阐明假装游戏与发展之间的关系性质。然而,作者没有提出如何构建未来工作方向的建议。在这里,我们提供了一个可能的框架来生成额外的研究。这个理论建议是基于最近认知计算方法的,其中反事实推理在因果学习中起着核心作用。我们提出,假装最初是作为人类学习的认知机制的产物出现的,然后反馈回来,成为增强这些相同过程最佳功能的关键。更具体地说,我们认为假装实际上是几种反事实推理形式之一,这对于因果认知至关重要——而参与假装场景的行为可能提供了早期的机会来练习最初导致其出现的技能。在这里,我们简要概述了这个理论框架,考虑了如何将这些想法与莱尔德等人(2013)评论中涵盖的先前工作结合起来,并提出了一些可通过经验检验的问题来指导未来的方向。