Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, German Primate Center - Leibniz Institute for Primate Research, Göttingen, Germany.
Social Origins Lab, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Sep 16;16(9):e0256614. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0256614. eCollection 2021.
Children imitate actions that are perceivably unnecessary to achieve the instrumental goal of an action sequence, a behavior termed over-imitation. It is debated whether this behavior is based on the motivation to follow behavioral norms and affiliate with the model or whether it can be interpreted in terms of a behavioral heuristic to copy observed intentional actions without questioning the purpose of each action step. To resolve this question, we tested whether preschool-aged children (N = 89) over-imitate a prosocial model, a helper in a prior third-party moral transgression, but refuse to over-imitate an antisocial model, the perpetrator of the moral transgression. After first observing an inefficient way to extract a reward from a puzzle box from either a perpetrator or a helper, children over-imitated the perpetrator to the same degree as they over-imitated the helper. In a second phase, children were then presented the efficient solution by the respective other model, i.e. the helper or the perpetrator. Over-imitation rates then dropped in both conditions, but remained significantly higher than in a baseline condition only when children had observed the prosocial model demonstrate the inefficient action sequence and the perpetrator performed the efficient solution. In contrast, over-imitation dropped to baseline level when the perpetrator had modelled the inefficient actions and the prosocial model subsequently showed children the efficient solution. In line with a dual-process account of over-imitation, results speak to a strong initial tendency to imitate perceivably irrelevant actions regardless of the model. Imitation behavior is then adjusted according to social motivations after deliberate consideration of different options to attain the goal.
儿童会模仿那些明显无法达到动作序列工具性目标的动作,这种行为被称为过度模仿。目前人们对这种行为是基于遵循行为规范并与模型建立联系的动机,还是可以根据复制观察到的有意动作的行为启发式来解释,而存在争议,无需质疑每个动作步骤的目的。为了解决这个问题,我们测试了学龄前儿童(N=89)是否会过度模仿亲社会的模型,即之前在第三方道德违规中扮演帮助者的角色,而拒绝模仿反社会的模型,即道德违规的肇事者。在首先观察到肇事者或帮助者从拼图盒中以低效方式提取奖励之后,儿童对肇事者的过度模仿程度与对帮助者的过度模仿程度相同。在第二阶段,然后由各自的其他模型,即帮助者或肇事者,向儿童展示有效的解决方案。在这两种情况下,过度模仿率都有所下降,但只有当儿童观察到亲社会模型演示了低效的动作序列,而肇事者执行了有效的解决方案时,过度模仿率才会显著高于基线条件。相比之下,当肇事者模仿了低效的动作,而亲社会的模型随后向儿童展示了有效的解决方案时,过度模仿率降至基线水平。根据过度模仿的双重过程解释,结果表明,无论模型如何,儿童都有强烈的初始模仿明显无关动作的倾向。然后,在对不同的目标达成方式进行深思熟虑后,模仿行为会根据社会动机进行调整。