Li Xiaoqian, Yow W Quin
Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore 487372, Singapore.
Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore 487372, Singapore.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2018 Sep;173:1-15. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2018.03.008. Epub 2018 Apr 6.
Prior work has shown that young children trust single accurate and inaccurate individuals to a similar extent in their endorsement of novel information. However, it remains unknown to what extent children trust a credible or noncredible individual when given information that is pitted against their own beliefs. The current study examined whether children, when given unexpected testimony that contradicted their initial beliefs but was not completely unbelievable, would selectively revise their beliefs depending on the informant's past history of accuracy. The participants (3- and 4-year-olds; N = 100) were familiarized with an informant who labeled a series of common objects either accurately or inaccurately. Following that, all children saw a picture of an ambiguous hybrid artifact that consisted of features of two typical common artifacts and were asked to identify the hybrid object with their own label. Subsequently, children watched the previously accurate or inaccurate informant give the same hybrid object a different but plausible label. Children expressed a greater tendency to override their initial judgments and endorse the unexpected testimony from a previously accurate informant than from someone who had consistently made naming errors. The findings provide novel understandings of the circumstances under which 3- and 4-year-old preschoolers may or may not rely on the informant's prior reliability in their selective learning.
先前的研究表明,幼儿在认可新信息时,对单一准确和不准确个体的信任程度相似。然而,当提供与他们自己的信念相悖的信息时,儿童在多大程度上信任可信或不可信的个体仍不明确。当前的研究考察了,当儿童得到与他们最初信念相矛盾但并非完全不可信的意外证词时,他们是否会根据提供信息者过去的准确性历史有选择地修正自己的信念。参与者(3岁和4岁儿童;N = 100)先熟悉了一个对一系列常见物品进行准确或不准确标注的提供信息者。之后,所有儿童看到一张由两种典型常见物品的特征组成的模糊混合物品的图片,并被要求用自己的标签来识别这个混合物品。随后,儿童观看之前准确或不准确的提供信息者给同一个混合物品一个不同但合理的标签。与那些一直犯命名错误的人相比,儿童表现出更大的倾向,即推翻他们最初的判断,并认可来自之前准确的提供信息者的意外证词。这些发现为3岁和4岁学龄前儿童在选择性学习中可能或不可能依赖提供信息者先前的可靠性的情况提供了新的理解。