| Literature DB >> 20097329 |
Elizabeth Baraff Bonawitz1, Darlene Ferranti, Rebecca Saxe, Alison Gopnik, Andrew N Meltzoff, James Woodward, Laura E Schulz.
Abstract
Adults' causal representations integrate information about predictive relations and the possibility of effective intervention; if one event reliably predicts another, adults can represent the possibility that acting to bring about the first event might generate the second. Here we show that although toddlers (mean age: 24 months) readily learn predictive relationships between physically connected events, they do not spontaneously initiate one event to try to generate the second (although older children, mean age: 47 months, do; Experiments 1 and 2). Toddlers succeed only when the events are initiated by a dispositional agent (Experiment 3), when the events involve direct contact between objects (Experiment 4), or when the events are described using causal language (Experiment 5). This suggests that causal language may help children extend their initial causal representations beyond agent-initiated and direct contact events. Copyright 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20097329 PMCID: PMC3121255 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2009.12.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277