Over Harriet, Carpenter Malinda
Deparmtnet of Psychology, University of York, UK.
School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, UK.
Dev Sci. 2015 Nov;18(6):917-25. doi: 10.1111/desc.12275. Epub 2014 Dec 20.
We investigated whether young children are able to infer affiliative relations and relative status from observing others' imitative interactions. Children watched videos showing one individual imitating another and were asked about the relationship between those individuals. Experiment 1 showed that 5-year-olds assume that individuals imitate people they like. Experiment 2 showed that children of the same age assume that an individual who imitates is relatively lower in status. Thus, although there are many advantages to imitating others, there may also be reputational costs. Younger children, 4-year-olds, did not reliably make either inference. Taken together, these experiments demonstrate that imitation conveys valuable information about third party relationships and that, at least by the age of 5, children are able to use this information in order to infer who is allied with whom and who is dominant over whom. In doing so, they add a new dimension to our understanding of the role of imitation in human social life.
我们研究了幼儿是否能够通过观察他人的模仿互动来推断亲密关系和相对地位。孩子们观看了展示一个人模仿另一个人的视频,并被问及这些人之间的关系。实验1表明,5岁的儿童认为人们会模仿他们喜欢的人。实验2表明,同龄儿童认为模仿他人的个体地位相对较低。因此,尽管模仿他人有很多好处,但也可能存在声誉成本。4岁的幼儿并不能可靠地做出这两种推断。综合来看,这些实验表明模仿传达了关于第三方关系的有价值信息,并且至少到5岁时,儿童能够利用这些信息来推断谁与谁结盟以及谁比谁占主导地位。通过这样做,他们为我们对模仿在人类社会生活中的作用的理解增添了一个新的维度。