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戴黄帽子为什么不可能:中美儿童的可能性判断。

Why wearing a yellow hat is impossible: Chinese and U.S. children's possibility judgments.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, 108 E. Dean Keeton Stop A8000, Austin, TX 78712, USA.

School of Education, Central China Normal University, 152 Luoyu Road, Tianjiabing 1006, Wuhan, Hubei 430079, China.

出版信息

Cognition. 2024 Oct;251:105856. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105856. Epub 2024 Jul 24.

Abstract

When thinking about possibility, one can consider both epistemic and deontic principles (i.e., physical possibility and permissibility). Cultural influences may lead individuals to weigh epistemic and deontic obligations differently; developing possibility conceptions are therefore positioned to be affected by cultural surroundings. Across two studies, 251 U.S. and Chinese 4-, 6-, and 8-year-olds sampled from major metropolitan areas in Texas and the Hubei, Sichuan, Gansu, and Guangdong Provinces judged the possibility of impossible, improbable, and ordinary events. Across cultures and ages, children judged ordinary events as possible and impossible events as impossible; cultural differences emerged in developing conceptions of improbable events. Whereas U.S. children became more likely to judge these events possible with age, Chinese children's judgments remained consistent with age: Chinese 4- to 8-year-olds judged these events to be possible ∼25% of the time. In Study 2, to test whether this difference was attributable to differential prioritization of epistemic versus deontic constraints, children also judged whether each event was an epistemic violation (i.e., required magic to happen) and a deontic violation (i.e., would result in someone getting in trouble). With age, epistemic judgments were increasingly predictive of possibility judgments for improbable events for U.S. children, and decreasingly so for Chinese children. Contrary to our predictions, deontic judgments were not predictive. We propose that cultural valuation of norms might shape children's developing intuitions about possibility. We discuss our findings in light of three accounts of possibility conceptions, suggesting ways to integrate cultural context into each.

摘要

当考虑可能性时,人们可以考虑认识和义务原则(即物理可能性和可允许性)。文化影响可能导致个人对认识和义务义务的重视程度不同;因此,可能性概念的发展可能会受到文化环境的影响。在两项研究中,来自德克萨斯州和湖北省、四川省、甘肃省和广东省主要城市的 251 名美国和中国 4 岁、6 岁和 8 岁的儿童对不可能、不太可能和普通事件的可能性进行了判断。在不同的文化和年龄段中,儿童将普通事件判断为可能,将不可能事件判断为不可能;在发展不太可能事件的概念时出现了文化差异。虽然美国儿童随着年龄的增长,越来越有可能将这些事件判断为可能,但中国儿童的判断与年龄保持一致:中国 4 至 8 岁的儿童将这些事件判断为可能的可能性约为 25%。在研究 2 中,为了测试这种差异是否归因于对认识和义务约束的不同优先排序,孩子们还判断每个事件是否是认识上的违规(即需要魔法才能发生)和道德上的违规(即会导致某人陷入困境)。随着年龄的增长,对于不太可能的事件,美国儿童的认识判断越来越能预测可能性判断,而中国儿童的预测则越来越不准确。与我们的预测相反,义务判断不能预测可能性判断。我们提出,对规范的文化重视可能会影响儿童对可能性的发展直觉。我们根据可能性概念的三种解释讨论了我们的发现,并提出了将文化背景纳入每种解释的方法。

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