Department of Psychology.
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences.
Dev Psychol. 2021 Feb;57(2):253-268. doi: 10.1037/dev0001140.
Young children often struggle to answer the question "what would have happened?" particularly in cases where the adult-like "correct" answer has the same outcome as the event that actually occurred. Previous work has assumed that children fail because they cannot engage in accurate counterfactual simulations. Children have trouble considering what to change and what to keep fixed when comparing counterfactual alternatives to reality. However, most developmental studies on counterfactual reasoning have relied on binary yes/no responses to counterfactual questions about complex narratives and so have only been able to document when these failures occur but not why and how. Here, we investigate counterfactual reasoning in a domain in which specific counterfactual possibilities are very concrete: simple collision interactions. In Experiment 1, we show that 5- to 10-year-old children (recruited from schools and museums in Connecticut) succeed in making predictions but struggle to answer binary counterfactual questions. In Experiment 2, we use a multiple-choice method to allow children to select a specific counterfactual possibility. We find evidence that 4- to 6-year-old children (recruited online from across the United States) do conduct counterfactual simulations, but the counterfactual possibilities younger children consider differ from adult-like reasoning in systematic ways. Experiment 3 provides further evidence that young children engage in simulation rather than using a simpler visual matching strategy. Together, these experiments show that the developmental changes in counterfactual reasoning are not simply a matter of whether children engage in counterfactual simulation but also how they do so. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
儿童在回答“如果......会怎样”的问题时常常感到困难,尤其是在成人的“正确”答案与实际发生的事件结果相同的情况下。先前的研究假设,儿童无法进行准确的反事实模拟,因此无法回答问题。当儿童将反事实的替代方案与现实进行比较时,他们很难确定要改变什么和保持什么不变。然而,大多数关于反事实推理的发展研究都依赖于对复杂叙事的反事实问题进行二元的是/否回答,因此只能记录这些失败何时发生,而不能记录原因和方式。在这里,我们在一个具体的反事实可能性非常具体的领域中研究反事实推理:简单的碰撞交互。在实验 1 中,我们表明,5 至 10 岁的儿童(从康涅狄格州的学校和博物馆招募)能够成功做出预测,但在回答二元反事实问题时却遇到困难。在实验 2 中,我们使用多项选择方法让儿童选择特定的反事实可能性。我们发现,4 至 6 岁的儿童(从美国各地的在线招募)确实进行了反事实模拟,但年幼的儿童考虑的反事实可能性与成人推理存在系统差异。实验 3 进一步证明,年幼的儿童进行了模拟,而不是使用更简单的视觉匹配策略。这些实验共同表明,反事实推理的发展变化不仅仅是儿童是否进行反事实模拟的问题,还包括他们如何进行模拟的问题。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2021 APA,保留所有权利)。