| Literature DB >> 28494226 |
Clare L Whalley1, Nicola Cutting2, Sarah R Beck3.
Abstract
Spontaneous tool innovation to solve physical problems is difficult for young children. In three studies, we explored the effect of prior experience with tools on tool innovation in children aged 4-7years (N=299). We also gave children an experience more consistent with that experienced by corvids in similar studies to enable fairer cross-species comparisons. Children who had the opportunity to use a premade target tool in the task context during a warm-up phase were significantly more likely to innovate a tool to solve the problem on the test trial compared with children who had no such warm-up experience. Older children benefited from either using or merely seeing a premade target tool prior to a test trial requiring innovation. Younger children were helped by using a premade target tool. Seeing the tool helped younger children in some conditions. We conclude that spontaneous innovation of tools to solve physical problems is difficult for children. However, children from 4years of age can innovate the means to solve the problem when they have had experience with the solution (visual or haptic exploration). Directions for future research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Analogy; Cognitive development; Comparative cognition; Innovation; Problem solving; Tool use
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28494226 DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2017.03.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Child Psychol ISSN: 0022-0965