School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, UK.
Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham, UK.
Sci Rep. 2022 Aug 18;12(1):14073. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-18231-7.
The scale of cumulative cultural evolution (CCE) is a defining characteristic of humans. Despite marked scientific interest in CCE, the cognitive underpinnings supporting its development remain understudied. We examined the role cognitive flexibility plays in CCE by studying U.S. children's (N = 167, 3-5-year-olds) propensity to relinquish an inefficient solution to a problem in favor of a more efficient alternative, and whether they would resist reverting to earlier versions. In contrast to previous work with chimpanzees, most children who first learned to solve a puzzlebox in an inefficient way switched to an observed, more efficient alternative. However, over multiple task interactions, 85% of children who switched reverted to the inefficient method. Moreover, almost all children in a control condition (who first learned the efficient method) switched to the inefficient method. Thus, children were keen to explore an alternative solution but, like chimpanzees, are overall conservative in reverting to their first-learned one.
累积文化进化(CCE)的规模是人类的一个决定性特征。尽管人们对 CCE 表现出浓厚的科学兴趣,但支持其发展的认知基础仍未得到充分研究。我们通过研究美国儿童(N=167,3-5 岁)放弃解决问题的低效方法转而采用更有效的替代方法的倾向,以及他们是否会抵制恢复到早期版本,来研究认知灵活性在 CCE 中所起的作用。与之前对黑猩猩的研究不同,大多数最初以低效方式学习解决难题的儿童会转而采用观察到的、更有效的替代方法。然而,在多次任务交互中,85%的转换儿童会恢复到低效方法。此外,在控制条件下(最初学习有效方法)的几乎所有儿童都切换到了低效方法。因此,儿童热衷于探索替代解决方案,但与黑猩猩一样,他们总体上倾向于坚持自己最初学到的方法。