Literature DB >> 17605535

Serious fun: preschoolers engage in more exploratory play when evidence is confounded.

Laura E Schulz1, Elizabeth Baraff Bonawitz.   

Abstract

Researchers, educators, and parents have long believed that children learn cause and effect relationships through exploratory play. However, previous research suggests that children are poor at designing informative experiments; children fail to control relevant variables and tend to alter multiple variables simultaneously. Thus, little is known about how children's spontaneous exploration might support accurate causal inferences. Here the authors suggest that children's exploratory play is affected by the quality of the evidence they observe. Using a novel free-play paradigm, the authors show that preschoolers (mean age: 57 months) distinguish confounded and unconfounded evidence, preferentially explore causally confounded (but not matched unconfounded) toys rather than novel toys, and spontaneously disambiguate confounded variables in the course of free play. Copyright 2007 APA.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17605535     DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.43.4.1045

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


  46 in total

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5.  The power of possibility: causal learning, counterfactual reasoning, and pretend play.

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Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2012-08-05       Impact factor: 6.237

6.  Response latencies and eye gaze provide insight on how toddlers gather evidence under uncertainty.

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7.  The double-edged sword of pedagogy: Instruction limits spontaneous exploration and discovery.

Authors:  Elizabeth Bonawitz; Patrick Shafto; Hyowon Gweon; Noah D Goodman; Elizabeth Spelke; Laura Schulz
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2011-01-08

8.  Sampling to learn words: Adults and children sample words that reduce referential ambiguity.

Authors:  Martin Zettersten; Jenny R Saffran
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2020-12-07

9.  Just do it? Investigating the gap between prediction and action in toddlers' causal inferences.

Authors:  Elizabeth Baraff Bonawitz; Darlene Ferranti; Rebecca Saxe; Alison Gopnik; Andrew N Meltzoff; James Woodward; Laura E Schulz
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2010-01-25

10.  Causal supports for early word learning.

Authors:  Amy E Booth
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2009 Jul-Aug
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