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婴儿心理旋转能力的早期贡献。

Early contributions to infants' mental rotation abilities.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.

Psychology Field Group, Pitzer College and Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, CA, USA.

出版信息

Dev Sci. 2018 Jul;21(4):e12613. doi: 10.1111/desc.12613. Epub 2017 Nov 15.

Abstract

Some cognitive abilities exhibit reliable gender differences, with females outperforming males in specific aspects of verbal ability, and males showing an advantage on certain spatial tasks. Among these cognitive gender differences, differences in mental rotation are the most robust, and appear to be present even in infants. A large body of animal research suggests that gonadal hormones, particularly testosterone, during early development could contribute to this gender difference in mental rotation. Also, substantial evidence supports an influence of socialization on mental rotation performance. The present study investigated the relationship of two types of factors, early postnatal testosterone exposure and parental attitudes about gender, to mental rotation performance in 61 healthy infants (29 males, 32 females). We measured salivary testosterone at two time points: 1-2.5 months of age and 5-6 months of age. Infants' mental rotation performance and parents' attitudes about gender were assessed at 5-6 months of age. As predicted, testosterone concentrations were significantly higher in boys than girls in early infancy (d = 0.54), and boys performed significantly better than girls on mental rotation (d = 0.64). A significant positive correlation between testosterone at age 1-2.5 months and mental rotation was found only in boys (r = 0.50, p = .01). A significant negative correlation between parents' gender-stereotypical attitudes and mental rotation performance was found only in girls (r = -.57, p = .002). These findings suggest that the early postnatal testosterone surge (also known as "mini-puberty") may have organizational influences on mental rotation performance in boys, and that parents may influence their daughters' mental rotation abilities beginning very early in life.

摘要

一些认知能力表现出可靠的性别差异,女性在言语能力的某些方面表现优于男性,而男性在某些空间任务上表现出优势。在这些认知性别差异中,心理旋转的差异最为显著,甚至在婴儿中也存在这种差异。大量动物研究表明,早期发育过程中的性腺激素,特别是睾酮,可能导致心理旋转的性别差异。此外,大量证据支持社会化为心理旋转表现带来的影响。本研究调查了两种类型的因素——早期产后睾酮暴露和父母对性别的态度——与 61 名健康婴儿(29 名男性,32 名女性)的心理旋转表现之间的关系。我们在两个时间点测量了唾液中的睾酮:1-2.5 个月和 5-6 个月。婴儿的心理旋转表现和父母对性别的态度在 5-6 个月时进行评估。正如预测的那样,在婴儿早期,男孩的睾酮浓度明显高于女孩(d = 0.54),男孩的心理旋转表现明显优于女孩(d = 0.64)。仅在男孩中发现了 1-2.5 个月时的睾酮与心理旋转之间的显著正相关(r = 0.50,p =.01)。仅在女孩中发现了父母的性别刻板态度与心理旋转表现之间的显著负相关(r = -.57,p =.002)。这些发现表明,早期产后睾酮激增(也称为“迷你青春期”)可能对男孩的心理旋转表现产生组织影响,并且父母可能从婴儿期很早就开始影响他们女儿的心理旋转能力。

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