| Literature DB >> 24465913 |
Lauren E Marsh1, Danielle Ropar2, Antonia F de C Hamilton3.
Abstract
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. This copying of visibly unnecessary actions is termed overimitation. Many competing theories propose mechanisms for overimitation behaviour. The present study examines these theories by studying the social factors that lead children to overimitate actions. Ninety-four children aged 5- to 8-years each completed five trials of an overimitation task. Each trial provided the opportunity to overimitate an action on familiar objects with minimal causal reasoning demands. Social cues (live or video demonstration) and eye contact from the demonstrator were manipulated. After the imitation, children's ratings of action rationality were collected. Substantial overimitation was seen which increased with age. In older children, overimitation was higher when watching a live demonstrator and when eye contact was absent. Actions rated as irrational were more likely to be imitated than those rated as rational. Children overimitated actions on familiar objects even when they rated those actions as irrational, suggesting that failure of causal reasoning cannot be driving overimitation. Our data support social explanations of overimitation and show that the influence of social factors increases with age over the 5- to 8-year-old age range.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24465913 PMCID: PMC3899208 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0086127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptions of each action within each trial.
| Goal | Action 1 | Action 2 | Action 3 |
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| Make a pattern with beads on the rack | Place bead 1 onto a peg | Place bead 2 on top of bead 1 | Place bead 3 on top of bead 2 |
| Put doll into a container | Remove lid from container | Put doll into the container | Put lid back on container |
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| Retrieve toy duck from box 1 | Unclip fastenings of box (R) | Tap the top of the box twice with index finger (I) | Remove the lid of the box and retrieve duck (R) |
| Retrieve toy elephant from box 2 | Remove elastic band (R) | Slide box along the table and back again (I) | Remove the lid of the box and retrieve elephant (R) |
| Retrieve toy lion from box 3 | Pull box towards you (R) | Stroke the top of the box twice with index finger (I) | Remove the end of the box and retrieve lion (R) |
| Build tower of blocks | Place block 1 in centre of table (R) | Turn block 2 360° (I) | Place block 2 on top of block 1 and place block 3 on top of block 2 (R) |
| Make a paper fan | Gather up concertina paper (R) | Tap paper on the table twice (I) | Fold the paper in half to produce a fan (R) |
(R) indicates a rational action. (I) indicates an irrational action.
Participant group characteristics.
| Live | Video | Difference (p) | |
| N | 42 | 52 | |
| Age | 6y9m (1y1m) | 6y8m(1y1m) | 0.67 |
| BPVS | 109.9 (10.6) | 115.6 (10.2) | 0.01 |
| SAS | 26.2 (5.1) | 23.3 (5.6) | 0.01 |
| Overimitation | 2.9 (1.9) | 1.2 (1.5) | 0.001 |
Numbers displayed are group means (and standard deviations) for participants in each condition.
Percentage of trials in which overimitation occurred, split by demonstration and apparatus type.
| Trial Type | Live: | Video: | Rationality |
| % overimitation | % overimitation | Difference Ratings | |
| Blocks | 70 | 23 | 1.43 (1.97) |
| Duck | 70 | 31 | 2.20 (1.75) |
| Elephant | 65 | 19 | 1.94 (1.75) |
| Fan | 23 | 15 | 1.71 (1.86) |
| Lion | 72 | 31 | 2.14 (1.70) |
Mean (and standard deviation) of rationality difference ratings for each apparatus type.
Figure 1Overimitation score for younger and older children (based on a median split) as a function of demonstration type.
The use of a median split for age is for visualisation purposes only; all analyses were run using age as a linear covariate.
Figure 2Overimitation score for younger and older children (based on a median split) as a function of preceding eye contact.
The use of a median split is for visualisation purposes only; all analyses were run using age as a linear covariate.
Figure 3Mean difference in rationality ratings between rational and irrational actions that were either overimitated or not overimitated.
Results are visualised using a median split for age but all analyses were run using age as a linear covariate.
Factors entered into the binary logistic regression.
| Variable | Beta | Wald | p |
| Demonstration Type | −1.41 | 34.38 | 0.0001 |
| Apparatus Type (fan) | −1.70 | 16.28 | 0.0001 |
| Rationality Ratings | 0.14 | 4.08 | 0.04 |
| Age x EC | 0.48 | 9.49 | 0.002 |
| Age | Excluded – step 1 | - | - |
| Age x Rationality Ratings | Excluded – step 2 | - | - |
| BVPS | Excluded – step 3 | - | - |
| SAS | Excluded – step 4 | - | - |
| Eye Contact | Excluded – step 5 | - | - |
| Demonstration x EC | Excluded – step 6 | - | - |