Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University.
Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
Dev Psychol. 2021 May;57(5):625-638. doi: 10.1037/dev0001171.
Mirror self-recognition (MSR) is considered to be the benchmark of objective self-awareness-the ability to think about oneself. Cross-cultural research showed that there are systematic differences in toddlers' MSR abilities between 18 and 24 months. Understanding whether these differences result from systematic variation in early social experiences will help us understand the processes through which objective self-awareness develops. In this study, we examined 57 18- to 22-month-old toddlers (31 girls) and their mothers from two distinct sociocultural contexts: urban Canada (58% of the subsample were Canadian-born native English-speakers) and rural Vanuatu, a small-scale island society located in the South Pacific. We had two main goals: (a) to identify the social-interactional correlates of MSR ability in this cross-cultural sample, and (b) to examine whether differences in passing rates could be attributed to confounding factors. Consistent with previous cross-cultural research, ni-Vanuatu toddlers passed the MSR test at significantly lower rates (7%) compared to their Canadian counterparts (68%). Among a suite of social interactive variables, only mothers' imitation of their toddlers' behavior during a free play session predicted MSR in the entire sample and maternal imitation partially mediated the effects of culture on MSR. In addition, low passing rates among ni-Vanuatu toddlers could not be attributed to reasons unrelated to self-development (i.e., motivation to show mark-directed behavior, understanding mirror-correspondence, representational thinking). This suggests that differences in MSR passing rates reflect true differences in self-recognition, and that parental imitation may have an important role in shaping the construction of visual self-knowledge in toddlers. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
镜像自我识别(MSR)被认为是客观自我意识的基准,即思考自身的能力。跨文化研究表明,18 至 24 个月大的幼儿在 MSR 能力方面存在系统性差异。了解这些差异是否源自早期社会经验的系统变化,将有助于我们理解客观自我意识发展的过程。在这项研究中,我们考察了来自两个不同社会文化背景的 57 名 18 至 22 个月大的幼儿(31 名女孩)及其母亲:加拿大城市(样本中有 58%是加拿大出生的以英语为母语的人)和农村瓦努阿图,一个位于南太平洋的小型岛屿社会。我们有两个主要目标:(a)在这个跨文化样本中确定 MSR 能力的社会互动相关因素;(b)检验通过率的差异是否归因于混杂因素。与之前的跨文化研究一致,瓦努阿图幼儿通过 MSR 测试的比例明显较低(7%),而加拿大幼儿的通过率为 68%。在一系列社会互动变量中,只有母亲在自由游戏期间模仿幼儿的行为,这一变量可以预测整个样本的 MSR,并且母亲的模仿部分中介了文化对 MSR 的影响。此外,瓦努阿图幼儿的低通过率不能归因于与自我发展无关的原因(即表现出指向标记行为的动机、理解镜像对应、表象思维)。这表明,MSR 通过率的差异反映了自我识别的真实差异,并且父母的模仿可能在塑造幼儿的视觉自我认知结构方面发挥着重要作用。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2021 APA,保留所有权利)。