Liu Shari, Almeida Melyssa
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
Psychol Bull. 2023 May-Jun;149(5-6):294-310. doi: 10.1037/bul0000393. Epub 2023 Jun 29.
The relationship between experience and knowledge is one of the oldest and deepest questions in psychology. In developmental science, research on this question has focused on prereaching infants who cannot yet retrieve objects by reaching for and grasping them. Over the past 2 decades, behavioral research in this population has produced two seemingly contradictory findings: After first-person experience with reaching via "sticky mittens" training, (a) infants come to expect that people reach efficiently, toward goal objects, but (b) under some conditions, they can express these expectations without training. We hypothesize that prereaching infants' understanding of other people's actions is driven by the representational demands of the tasks used to test their abilities, rather than by first-person motor experience per se. We conducted a qualitative review and a quantitative, preregistered "mega-analysis" of the original data from this past work (i.e., an analysis of looking responses from = 650 infants, 30 conditions, and 8 articles). We found that the manipulations with the strongest effects (measured via effect sizes and Bayes factors) on infants' understanding of other people's goals and physical constraints, controlling for infant age, were abstract features of action: Whether the action produced an observable effect in the world on contact and provided unambiguous evidence for the actor's goal. We end by presenting a broad hypothesis about how young infants learn about other people's minds and actions, centered on an early intuitive theory of action planning, to be tested with future work. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
经验与知识之间的关系是心理学中最古老、最深奥的问题之一。在发展科学领域,针对这个问题的研究聚焦于尚不能通过伸手抓取来获取物体的前够物婴儿。在过去20年里,针对这一群体的行为研究得出了两个看似相互矛盾的发现:在通过“粘性手套”训练获得了伸手够物的第一人称经验后,(a)婴儿开始期望人们能高效地朝着目标物体伸手,但(b)在某些情况下,他们无需训练就能表达这些期望。我们假设,前够物婴儿对他人行为的理解是由用于测试其能力的任务的表征需求驱动的,而非第一人称运动经验本身。我们对过去这项研究的原始数据进行了定性综述和定量的预注册“元分析”(即对来自650名婴儿、30种情况和8篇文章的注视反应进行分析)。我们发现,在控制婴儿年龄的情况下,对婴儿对他人目标和物理限制的理解影响最大的操作(通过效应量和贝叶斯因子衡量)是动作的抽象特征:即该动作在与物体接触时是否在现实世界中产生了可观察到的效果,以及是否为行为者的目标提供了明确的证据。我们最后提出了一个关于幼儿如何了解他人心理和行为的宽泛假设,该假设以早期的行动规划直观理论为核心,有待未来的研究进行验证。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023美国心理学会,保留所有权利)