| Literature DB >> 26029132 |
Zhidan Wang1, Rebecca A Williamson1, Andrew N Meltzoff2.
Abstract
Children learn about the social and physical world by observing other people's acts. This experiment tests both Chinese and American children's learning of a rule. For theoretical reasons we chose the rule of categorizing objects by the weight. Children, age 4 years, saw an adult heft four visually-identical objects and sort them into two bins based on an invisible property-the object's weight. Children who saw this categorization behavior were more likely to sort those objects by weight than were children who saw control actions using the same objects and the same bins. Crucially, children also generalized to a novel set of objects with no further demonstration, suggesting rule learning. We also report that high-fidelity imitation of the adult's "hefting" acts may give children crucial experience with the objects' weights, which could then be used to infer the more abstract rule. The connection of perception, action, and cognition was found in children from both cultures, which leads to broad implications for how the imitation of adults' acts functions as a lever in cognitive development.Entities:
Keywords: categorization; cross-culture; imitation; rule learning; social learning; weight
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029132 PMCID: PMC4429617 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Photographs of the experimental materials (A), which consist of sets of four visually-identical ducks, four visually-identical zebras, and bins to sort the objects into. Within each set, two objects are heavy and two are light. Row (B) shows an adult making an upward “hefting” motion, which consisted of a full cycle of raising and lowering the object on a flat palm as if weighing the object.
FIGURE 2Mean number of weight sorts (±SE) as a function of test group and culture.
FIGURE 3Mean hefting score (±SE) as a function of sorting type.