1. The Development of Selective Copying: Children's Learning From an Expert Versus Their Mother.
- Author
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Lucas AJ, Burdett ERR, Burgess V, Wood LA, McGuigan N, Harris PL, and Whiten A
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Child Behavior physiology, Child Development physiology, Imitative Behavior physiology, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Social Learning
- Abstract
This study tested the prediction that, with age, children should rely less on familiarity and more on expertise in their selective social learning. Experiment 1 (N = 50) found that 5- to 6-year-olds copied the technique their mother used to extract a prize from a novel puzzle box, in preference to both a stranger and an established expert. This bias occurred despite children acknowledging the expert model's superior capability. Experiment 2 (N = 50) demonstrated a shift in 7- to 8-year-olds toward copying the expert. Children aged 9-10 years did not copy according to a model bias. The findings of a follow-up study (N = 30) confirmed that, instead, they prioritized their own-partially flawed-causal understanding of the puzzle box., (© 2016 The Authors. Child Development © 2016 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.)
- Published
- 2017
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