Meltzoff Andrew N, Moore M Keith
University of Washington.
Dev Psychol. 1989 Nov;25(6):954-962. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.25.6.954.
This study evaluated the psychological mechanisms underlying imitation of facial actions in young infants. A novel aspect of the study was that it used a nonoral gesture that had not been tested before (head movement), as well as a tongue-protrusion gesture. Results showed imitation of both displays. Imitation was not limited to the intervals during which the experimenter's movements were displayed; Ss also imitated from memory after the display had stopped. The results established that newborn imitation is not constrained to a few privileged oral movements. The findings support Meltzoff and Moore's hypothesis that early imitation is mediated by an active cross-modal matching process. A common representational code may unite the perception and production of basic human acts.
本研究评估了年幼儿童面部动作模仿背后的心理机制。该研究的一个新颖之处在于,它使用了一种之前未被测试过的非口头手势(头部动作)以及伸舌手势。结果显示两种展示动作均被模仿。模仿并不局限于实验者动作展示的时间段;被试在展示停止后也能凭记忆进行模仿。这些结果表明新生儿模仿并不局限于少数特定的口腔动作。这些发现支持了梅尔佐夫和摩尔的假设,即早期模仿是由一个主动的跨模态匹配过程介导的。一个共同的表征代码可能将人类基本行为的感知和产生联系起来。