Literature DB >> 33488445

Children Only 3 Years Old Can Succeed at Conditional "If, Then" Reasoning, Much Earlier Than Anyone Had Thought Possible.

Daphne S Ling1, Cole D Wong1, Adele Diamond1.   

Abstract

That conditional, if-then reasoning does not emerge until 4-5 years has long been accepted. Here we show that children barely 3 years old can do conditional reasoning. All that was needed was a superficial change to the stimuli: When color was a property of the shapes (line drawings of a star and truck) rather than of the background (as in all past conditional discrimination [CD] testing), 3-year-olds could succeed. Three-year-olds do not seem to use color to inform them which shape is correct unless color is a property of the shapes themselves. While CD requires integrating color and shape information, the dimensional change card sort (DCCS) task requires keeping those dimension cognitively separate - inhibiting attention to one (e.g., shape) when sorting by the other (e.g., color). For DCCS, a superficial change to the stimuli that is the inverse of what helps on CD enables 3-year-olds to succeed when normally they do not until ∼ 4 ⁤ 1 2 years. As we and others have previously shown, 3-year-olds can succeed at DCCS when color is a property of the background (e.g., a white truck on a red background), instead of a property of the stimulus (e.g., a red truck on a white background, as in standard DCCS). Our findings on CD and DCCS suggest that scaffolding preschoolers' emerging conceptual skills by changing the way stimuli look (perceptual bootstrapping) enables 3-year-olds to demonstrate reasoning abilities long thought beyond their grasp. Evidently, children of 3 years have difficulty mentally separating dimensions (e.g., color and shape) of the same object and difficulty mentally integrating dimensions not part of the same object. Our present CD findings plus our earlier DCCS findings provide strong evidence against prominent cognitive complexity, conditional reasoning, and graded memory theories for why 3-year-olds fail these two tasks. The ways we have traditionally queried children may have obscured the budding reasoning competencies present at 3 years of age.
Copyright © 2021 Ling, Wong and Diamond.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conceptual understanding; conditional associative learning; dimensional change card sort; preschoolers; pull; young children

Year:  2021        PMID: 33488445      PMCID: PMC7815697          DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.571891

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Psychol        ISSN: 1664-1078


  20 in total

1.  Training transfer between card sorting and false belief understanding: helping children apply conflicting descriptions.

Authors:  Daniela Kloo; Josef Perner
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2003 Nov-Dec

2.  Simple color discrimination in chimpanzees: effect of varying contiguity between cue and incentive.

Authors:  M E JARVIK
Journal:  J Comp Physiol Psychol       Date:  1956-10

3.  G*Power 3: a flexible statistical power analysis program for the social, behavioral, and biomedical sciences.

Authors:  Franz Faul; Edgar Erdfelder; Albert-Georg Lang; Axel Buchner
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2007-05

4.  Induction of relational schemas: common processes in reasoning and complex learning.

Authors:  G S Halford; J D Bain; M T Maybery; G Andrews
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  1998-04       Impact factor: 3.468

5.  Preschool children's performance in task switching on the dimensional change card sort task: separating the dimensions aids the ability to switch.

Authors:  Adele Diamond; Stephanie M Carlson; Danielle M Beck
Journal:  Dev Neuropsychol       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 2.253

Review 6.  Processing capacity defined by relational complexity: implications for comparative, developmental, and cognitive psychology.

Authors:  G S Halford; W H Wilson; S Phillips
Journal:  Behav Brain Sci       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 12.579

Review 7.  Performance on traditional matching to sample, non-matching to sample, and object discrimination tasks by 12- to 32-month-old children. A developmental progression.

Authors:  W H Overman
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 5.691

Review 8.  Rate of maturation of the hippocampus and the developmental progression of children's performance on the delayed non-matching to sample and visual paired comparison tasks.

Authors:  A Diamond
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 5.691

9.  Active versus latent representations: a neural network model of perseveration, dissociation, and decalage.

Authors:  J Bruce Morton; Yuko Munakata
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 3.038

10.  Development of knowledge about the appearance-reality distinction.

Authors:  J H Flavell; F L Green; E R Flavell
Journal:  Monogr Soc Res Child Dev       Date:  1986
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.