Humans Appear Hardwired To Learn By 'Over-Imitation'
ScienceDaily (Dec. 6, 2007) — Children learn by imitating adults--so much so
that they will rethink how an object works if they observe an adult taking
unnecessary steps when using that object, according to a new Yale study.
"Even when you add time pressure, or warn the children not to do the unnecessary
actions, they seem unable to avoid reproducing the adult's irrelevant actions,"
said Derek Lyons, doctoral candidate, developmental psychology, and first author
of the study. "They have already incorporated the actions into their idea of how
the object works."
Learning by imitation occurs from the simplest preverbal communication to the
most complex adult expertise. It is the basis for much of our success as a
species, but the benefits are less clear in instances of "over-imitation," where
children copy behavior that is not needed, Lyons said.
It has been theorized that children over-imitate just to fit in, or out of
habit. The Yale team found in this study that children follow the adults' steps
faithfully to the point where they actually change their mind about how an
object functions.
The study included three-to-five-year-old children who engaged in a series of
exercises. In one exercise, the children could see a dinosaur toy through a
clear plastic box. The researcher used a sequence of irrelevant and relevant
actions to retrieve the toy, such as tapping the lid of the jar with a feather
before unscrewing the lid.
The children then were asked which actions were silly and which were not. They
were praised when they pinpointed the actions that had no value in retrieving
the toy. The idea was to teach the children that the adult was unreliable and
that they should ignore his unnecessary actions.
Later the children watched adults retrieve a toy turtle from a box using
needless steps. When asked to do the task themselves, the children
over-imitated, despite their prior training to ignore irrelevant actions by the
adults.
"What of all of this means," Lyons said, "is that children's ability to imitate
can actually lead to confusion when they see an adult doing something in a
disorganized or inefficient way. Watching an adult doing something wrong can
make it much harder for kids to do it right."
Journal reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: online
publication week of December 3, 2007 (doi/10.1073/pnas.0704452104)
Co-authors include Andrew Young of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Frank
Keil of Yale, who was the senior author.
Adapted from materials provided by Yale University.