LEARNING TO IMITATE IN INFANCY
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- review article
- Vol. 47 (1) , 14-31
Abstract
Theories of imitation learning are examined regarding their account of how the human infant acquires the ability to emit a response which resembles a response previously exhibited by another. Each theory suffers from 1 or more of the following problems: logical inconsistency, incompleteness and lack of empirical support. Of these views, three (associative thesis, discriminative learning thesis and acquired value of the relational stimulus of similarity) are not mutually exclusive, and, therefore, they could be included in a theory of learning to imitate. None of these learning theses deals with the fact that imitation requires the infant to consistently abstract similar features from stimuli which differ on various dimensions. Consideration is given to the role of cognition in a theory of learning to imitate.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: