Bauer P J, Hertsgaard L A, Dow G A
Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455-0345, USA.
Memory. 1994 Dec;2(4):353-82. doi: 10.1080/09658219408258955.
The time course of development of the ability to remember specific past events is a matter of considerable curiosity and debate. Traditional and contemporary theories alike suggest that infants are unable to consolidate and stabilise event knowledge for recall after a long time period. In two experiments, we used elicited imitation, a nonverbal analogue to cued verbal recall, to test 21-, 24-, and 29-month-old children's recall of events they had experienced eight months previously. At the time of original exposure some of the events were novel, whereas others depicted activities familiar to 1-year-olds. At the eight-month retention test, performance of the experienced children was compared to that of matched naive controls. In both experiments the experienced children produced a greater number of the novel events; there were no differences between the groups on the familiar events. The results demonstrate long-term recall of specific past events by 1- to 2-year-olds. They thus challenge the suggestion that the absence of memories from infancy and early childhood is attributable to the inability to form memories that are enduring and accessible over time.
记住特定过去事件的能力的发展时间进程是一个相当令人好奇和有争议的问题。传统理论和当代理论都认为,婴儿无法在很长一段时间后巩固和稳定事件知识以便回忆。在两项实验中,我们使用了诱发模仿(一种线索化言语回忆的非语言类似物)来测试21个月、24个月和29个月大的儿童对他们八个月前经历过的事件的回忆。在最初接触时,一些事件是新颖的,而其他事件描绘的是一岁儿童熟悉的活动。在八个月的保留测试中,将有经验的儿童的表现与匹配的未经历过的对照组的表现进行比较。在两项实验中,有经验的儿童对新颖事件的再现数量更多;在熟悉事件上两组之间没有差异。结果表明1至2岁的儿童能够对特定过去事件进行长期回忆。因此,它们挑战了这样一种观点,即婴儿期和幼儿期没有记忆是由于无法形成随着时间推移持久且可提取的记忆。