Van Reet Jennifer
Department of Psychology, Providence College, Providence, Rhode Island.
J Genet Psychol. 2016 Sep-Oct;177(5):131-142. doi: 10.1080/00221325.2016.1211603. Epub 2016 Aug 23.
Many theories of how pretense is mentally represented have been posited, but none have been effectually empirically tested to date. This research is the first to explore how children and adults mentally process simple pretend actions, specifically pretend object substitutions, and whether this representation changes with age. Preschoolers, older children, and undergraduates heard or read about a variety of pretend object substitutions, and their reaction time to name an image related to the object's real identity, pretend identity, or an unrelated image was measured. To test what is unique to pretense, these reaction times were compared to those from participants who responded to the same images after reading about nonpretend versions of the same actions. Results suggest that preschoolers inhibit reality when representing a pretend action, older children activate an object's real and pretend identities equally, and adults activate the object's real identity more than the pretend one. Implications for current theories of pretense representation are discussed.
关于假装在心理上是如何被表征的,已经提出了许多理论,但迄今为止,还没有一个得到有效的实证检验。这项研究首次探讨了儿童和成人如何在心理上处理简单的假装动作,特别是假装物体替换,以及这种表征是否随年龄而变化。学龄前儿童、大龄儿童和大学生听或读到各种假装物体替换的内容,并测量他们说出与物体真实身份、假装身份或无关图像相关的图像的反应时间。为了测试假装的独特之处,将这些反应时间与那些在阅读相同动作的非假装版本后对相同图像做出反应的参与者的反应时间进行了比较。结果表明,学龄前儿童在表征假装动作时会抑制现实,大龄儿童对物体的真实身份和假装身份的激活程度相同,而成年人对物体真实身份的激活程度高于假装身份。文中讨论了这些结果对当前假装表征理论的启示。