Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Dev Sci. 2024 Sep;27(5):e13374. doi: 10.1111/desc.13374. Epub 2023 Feb 20.
When collaboratively solving problems, children discuss information reliability, for example, whether claims are based on direct or indirect observation, termed as "metatalk". Unlike English in which evidential marking is optional, languages with obligatory evidential marking such as Turkish, might provide children some advantages in communicating the reliability of their claims. The current preregistered online study investigated Turkish- and English-speaking 3- and 5-year-old children's (N = 144) use of metatalk. The child and the experimenter (E) were asked to decide in which of the two houses a toy was hiding. One house had the toy's footprints. When E left the Zoom meeting, an informant told the child that the toy was in the other house without the footprints in three within-subjects conditions. In the direct-observation condition, the child witnessed the informant move the toy. In the indirect-witness condition, the informant checked both houses and said that the toy was in the other house. In the indirect-hearsay condition, the informant simply said that the toy was in the other house. When E returned, the child had to convince E about how they knew the toy was in the other house using metatalk (e.g., "I saw it move"). Turkish-speaking children used metatalk more often than did English-speaking children, especially in the direct-observation condition. In the two indirect conditions, both groups of 5-year-olds were similar in their use of metatalk, but Turkish speaking 3-year-olds produced metatalk more often than did English-speaking 3-year-olds. Thus, languages with obligatory evidential marking might facilitate children's collaborative reasoning. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: Children as young as 3 years of age can produce metatalk. Turkish-speaking children produce metatalk more often than English-speaking children. The difference between the two linguistic groups is more pronounced at age 3.
当孩子们合作解决问题时,他们会讨论信息的可靠性,例如,主张是否基于直接或间接观察,这被称为“元谈话”。与英语不同,英语中的证据标记是可选的,而像土耳其语这样的强制性证据标记语言可能会为孩子们在交流其主张的可靠性方面提供一些优势。本研究通过在线预注册,调查了 3 岁和 5 岁的土耳其语和英语儿童(N=144)使用元谈话的情况。孩子和实验者(E)被要求在两个房子中的哪一个藏着玩具。一个房子有玩具的脚印。当 E 离开 Zoom 会议时,一个信息提供者在三个内隐条件下告诉孩子,玩具在另一个没有脚印的房子里。在直接观察条件下,孩子亲眼目睹了信息提供者移动玩具。在间接证人条件下,信息提供者检查了两个房子,并说玩具在另一个房子里。在间接传闻条件下,信息提供者只是说玩具在另一个房子里。当 E 返回时,孩子必须使用元谈话(例如,“我看到它移动”)来说服 E 他们是如何知道玩具在另一个房子里的。与英语儿童相比,土耳其语儿童更频繁地使用元谈话,尤其是在直接观察条件下。在两个间接条件下,两组 5 岁儿童在使用元谈话方面相似,但土耳其语 3 岁儿童比英语 3 岁儿童更频繁地使用元谈话。因此,具有强制性证据标记的语言可能会促进儿童的合作推理。研究亮点:年仅 3 岁的儿童就能进行元谈话。土耳其语儿童比英语儿童更频繁地使用元谈话。这两个语言群体之间的差异在 3 岁时更为明显。