Department of Psychology, Ochanomizu University, 2-1-1 Ohtsuka, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 112-8610, Japan.
Division of Human Communication, Development and Hearing, School of Health Sciences, University of Manchester, Coupland 1, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK.
Infant Behav Dev. 2021 Nov;65:101631. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2021.101631. Epub 2021 Aug 17.
Scale errors are observed when young children make mistakes by attempting to put their bodies into miniature versions of everyday objects. Such errors have been argued to arise from children's insufficient integration of size into their object representations. The current study investigated whether Japanese and UK children's (18-24 months old, N = 80) visual exploration in a categorization task related to their scale error production. UK children who showed greater local processing made more scale errors, whereas Japanese children, who overall showed greater global processing, showed no such relationship. These results raise the possibility that children's suppression of scale errors emerges not from attention to size per se, but from a critical integration of global (i.e., size) and local (i.e., object features) information during object processing, and provide evidence that this mechanism differs cross-culturally.
当幼儿试图将身体放入日常物体的微型版本时,会出现比例错误。有人认为,这种错误是由于儿童对物体的大小没有充分的整合。本研究调查了日本和英国儿童(18-24 个月大,N=80)在与比例错误产生相关的分类任务中的视觉探索是否与其比例错误产生有关。在分类任务中,表现出更多局部加工的英国儿童会产生更多的比例错误,而整体上表现出更多整体加工的日本儿童则没有这种关系。这些结果表明,儿童对比例错误的抑制不是源于对大小本身的关注,而是源于在物体处理过程中对全局(即大小)和局部(即物体特征)信息的关键整合,并且提供了证据表明这种机制在跨文化上是不同的。