Shtulman Andrew, Phillips Jonathan
Department of Psychology, Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA 90041, USA.
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2018 Jan;165:161-182. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2017.05.012. Epub 2017 Jun 23.
Young children have difficulty in distinguishing events that violate physical laws (impossible events) from those that violate mere physical regularities (improbable events). They judge both as "impossible." Young children also have difficulty in distinguishing events that violate moral laws (immoral events) from events that violate mere social regularities (unconventional events). They judge both as "wrong." In this set of studies, we explored the possibility that both difficulties arise from a more general deficit in modal cognition, or the way in which children represent and reason about possibilities. Participants (80 children aged 3-10years and 101 adults) were shown impossible, improbable, unconventional, and immoral events and were asked to judge whether the events could occur in real life and whether they would be okay to do. Preschool-aged children not only had difficulty distinguishing law-violating events from regularity-violating events but also had difficulty distinguishing the two modal questions themselves, judging physically abnormal events (e.g., floating in the air) as immoral and judging socially abnormal events (e.g., lying to a parent) as impossible. These findings were replicated in a second study where participants (74 children and 78 adults) judged whether the events under consideration would require magic (a specific consequence of impossibility) or would require punishment (a specific consequence of impermissibility). Our findings imply that young children's modal representations clearly distinguish abnormal events from ordinary events but do not clearly distinguish different types of abnormal events from each other. That is, the distinction between whether an event could occur and whether an event should occur must be learned.
幼儿难以区分违反物理定律的事件(不可能事件)和仅违反物理规律的事件(不太可能事件)。他们将两者都判断为“不可能”。幼儿也难以区分违反道德法则的事件(不道德事件)和仅违反社会常规的事件(非常规事件)。他们将两者都判断为“错误”。在这组研究中,我们探讨了这两种困难是否都源于模态认知方面更普遍的缺陷,即儿童表征可能性并据此推理的方式。向参与者(80名3至10岁儿童和101名成年人)展示不可能、不太可能、非常规和不道德的事件,并要求他们判断这些事件是否能在现实生活中发生以及这样做是否可以。学龄前儿童不仅难以区分违反法律的事件和违反规律的事件,而且难以区分这两个模态问题本身,他们将身体异常事件(例如在空中漂浮)判断为不道德,将社会异常事件(例如对父母说谎)判断为不可能。这些发现在第二项研究中得到了重复,在该研究中参与者(74名儿童和78名成年人)判断所考虑的事件是否需要魔法(不可能的一种特定结果)或是否需要惩罚(不可允许的一种特定结果)。我们的发现表明,幼儿的模态表征能清楚地区分异常事件和普通事件,但不能清楚地区分不同类型的异常事件。也就是说,事件是否可能发生与事件是否应该发生之间的区别必须通过学习才能掌握。