Faculty of Psychology, University of Akureyri, Akureyri, Iceland.
Department of Psychology, MEF University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Dev Sci. 2024 Sep;27(5):e13520. doi: 10.1111/desc.13520. Epub 2024 Apr 25.
Across development, as children acquire a deeper understanding of their environment, they explore less and take advantage, or "exploit," what they already know. Here, we test whether children also enforce exploration-oriented search behaviors onto others. Specifically, we ask whether children are more likely to encourage a search agent to explore versus exploit their environment, and whether this pattern varies across childhood (between 3 and 6 years). We also ask whether this pattern differs between children and adults, and generalizes across two different sociocultural contexts-Turkey and the United States-that differ on dimensions that might relate to children's decisions about exploration (e.g., curiosity-focused educational practices, attitudes toward uncertainty avoidance). Participants (N = 358) watched an agent search for rewards and were asked at various points whether the agent should "stay" (exploit) in their current location, or "go" (explore) to a new location. At all points in the experiment, children enforced exploration significantly more often than adults. Early in the agent's search, children in the US enforced exploration more often than children in Turkey; later in the search, younger children (from both sociocultural contexts) were more likely to continue enforcing exploration compared to older children. These findings highlight that children are not only highly exploratory themselves, but also enforce exploration onto others-underscoring the central role that exploration plays in driving early cognitive development across diverse sociocultural contexts. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: The current study examined developmental and cross-cultural differences in children and adults' enforcement of explore-exploit search strategies. Children in the US and Turkey enforced exploration more than adults, who enforced exploitation more often; results were generally consistent across cultures with small differences. Mirroring developmental changes in children's own search behavior; the tendency to enforce exploration decreased between 3- to 6-years of age. Findings underscore the central role of an "exploration mindset" in children's early decision-making-even when exploration has no direct benefits to the child themselves.
在发展过程中,随着儿童对环境的理解不断加深,他们的探索行为会减少,而是利用(“利用”)他们已经知道的东西。在这里,我们测试儿童是否也会将面向探索的搜索行为强加给他人。具体来说,我们想问的是,儿童是否更有可能鼓励搜索代理探索环境而不是利用环境,以及这种模式是否在儿童期(3 至 6 岁之间)有所不同。我们还询问这种模式在儿童和成人之间是否不同,以及是否可以推广到两个不同的社会文化背景(土耳其和美国),这些背景在可能与儿童探索决策相关的维度上存在差异(例如,以好奇心为中心的教育实践、对不确定性回避的态度)。参与者(N=358)观看了一个代理搜索奖励的过程,并在不同的时间点被问到代理是否应该“停留”(利用)在当前位置,或者“去”(探索)到一个新位置。在实验的所有阶段,儿童比成人更频繁地强制执行探索。在代理搜索的早期,美国的儿童比土耳其的儿童更频繁地强制执行探索;在搜索的后期,来自两个社会文化背景的年幼儿童(比年长儿童)更有可能继续强制执行探索。这些发现强调,儿童不仅自己具有高度的探索性,而且还将探索强加给他人——这突显了探索在不同社会文化背景下推动早期认知发展的核心作用。研究亮点:本研究考察了儿童和成人在探索-利用搜索策略方面的发展和跨文化差异。美国和土耳其的儿童比成人更加强制探索,而成年人则更加强制利用;结果在文化上基本一致,但存在细微差异。与儿童自身搜索行为的发展变化相呼应;3 至 6 岁之间,强制探索的倾向逐渐减少。研究结果强调了“探索心态”在儿童早期决策中的核心作用,即使探索对儿童自身没有直接好处。