Vanderbilt Kimberly E, Ochoa Karlena D, Heilbrun Jayd
Psychology, California State University San Marcos, California, USA.
Br J Dev Psychol. 2018 Nov;36(4):634-651. doi: 10.1111/bjdp.12247. Epub 2018 May 6.
The present research investigated whether young children link the accuracy of text-based information to the accuracy of its author. Across three experiments, three- and four-year-olds (N = 231) received information about object labels from accurate and inaccurate sources who provided information both in text and verbally. Of primary interest was whether young children would selectively rely on information provided by more accurate sources, regardless of the form in which the information was communicated. Experiment 1 tested children's trust in text-based information (e.g., books) written by an author with a history of either accurate or inaccurate verbal testimony and found that children showed greater trust in books written by accurate authors. Experiment 2 replicated the findings of Experiment 1 and extended them by showing that children's selective trust in more accurate text-based sources was not dependent on experience trusting or distrusting the author's verbal testimony. Experiment 3 investigated this understanding in reverse by testing children's trust in verbal testimony communicated by an individual who had authored either accurate or inaccurate text-based information. Experiment 3 revealed that children showed greater trust in individuals who had authored accurate rather than inaccurate books. Experiment 3 also demonstrated that children used the accuracy of text-based sources to make inferences about the mental states of the authors. Taken together, these results suggest children do indeed link the reliability of text-based sources to the reliability of the author. Statement of Contribution Existing knowledge Children use sources' prior accuracy to predict future accuracy in face-to-face verbal interactions. Children who are just learning to read show increased trust in text bases (vs. verbal) information. It is unknown whether children consider authors' prior accuracy when judging the accuracy of text-based information. New knowledge added by this article Preschool children track sources' accuracy across communication mediums - from verbal to text-based modalities and vice versa. Children link the reliability of text-based sources to the reliability of the author.
本研究调查了幼儿是否会将基于文本的信息的准确性与信息作者的准确性联系起来。在三项实验中,3岁和4岁的儿童(N = 231)从提供文本和口头信息的准确和不准确来源接收了关于物体标签的信息。主要关注的是幼儿是否会选择性地依赖更准确来源提供的信息,而不管信息传达的形式如何。实验1测试了儿童对由有准确或不准确口头证词历史的作者撰写的基于文本的信息(如书籍)的信任,发现儿童对由准确作者撰写的书籍表现出更大的信任。实验2重复了实验1的结果,并进一步表明,儿童对更准确的基于文本的来源的选择性信任并不依赖于信任或不信任作者口头证词的经验。实验3通过测试儿童对由撰写了准确或不准确基于文本的信息的个人传达的口头证词的信任,反过来研究了这种理解。实验3表明,儿童对撰写了准确书籍而非不准确书籍的个人表现出更大的信任。实验3还表明,儿童利用基于文本的来源的准确性来推断作者的心理状态。综合来看,这些结果表明儿童确实将基于文本的来源的可靠性与作者的可靠性联系起来。贡献声明现有知识儿童在面对面的口头互动中利用来源的先前准确性来预测未来的准确性。刚开始学习阅读的儿童对基于文本(相对于口头)的信息表现出更高的信任。尚不清楚儿童在判断基于文本的信息的准确性时是否会考虑作者的先前准确性。本文新增的新知识学龄前儿童在不同的交流媒介中追踪来源的准确性——从口头到基于文本的方式,反之亦然。儿童将基于文本的来源的可靠性与作者的可靠性联系起来。