Investigating children as cultural magnets: do young children transmit redundant information along diffusion chains?
- 17 September 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 363 (1509) , 3541-3551
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2008.0136
Abstract
The primary goal of this study was to investigate cultural transmission in young children, with specific reference to the phenomenon of overimitation. Diffusion chains were used to compare the imitation of 2- and 3-year-olds on a task in which the initial child in each chain performed a series of relevant and irrelevant actions on a puzzle box in order to retrieve a reward. Children in the chains witnessed the actions performed on one of two boxes, one which was transparent and so the lack of causality of the irrelevant actions was obvious, while the other was opaque and so the lack of causal relevance was not obvious. Unlike previous dyadic research in which children overimitate a model, the irrelevant actions were parsed out early in the diffusion chains. Even though children parsed out irrelevant actions, they showed fidelity to the method used to perform a relevant action both within dyads and across groups. This was true of 3-year-olds, and also 2-year-olds, therefore extending findings from previous research.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- The multiple roles of cultural transmission experiments in understanding human cultural evolutionPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2008
- Establishing an experimental science of culture: animal social diffusion experimentsPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2008
- Studying cumulative cultural evolution in the laboratoryPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2008
- Cumulative cultural evolution in the laboratory: An experimental approach to the origins of structure in human languageProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- The hidden structure of overimitationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Faithful replication of foraging techniques along cultural transmission chains by chimpanzees and childrenProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Copying results and copying actions in the process of social learning: chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and human children (Homo sapiens)Animal Cognition, 2004
- How do children ape? Applying concepts from the study of non‐human primates to the developmental study of ‘imitation’ in childrenDevelopmental Science, 2002
- Fourteen- through 18-month-old infants differentially imitate intentional and accidental actionsInfant Behavior and Development, 1998
- Protocultural Aspects of Chimpanzees’ Responsiveness to Novel ObjectsFolia Primatologica, 1972