The planning and execution of natural sequential actions in the preschool years

•In unfamiliar tasks, children frequently imitate actions that are irrelevant to achieve goals.•Over-imitation was investigated using a familiar sequential action.•A decrease of over-imitation behaviour was observed from 3 to 5years of age.•Learning about event sequences depends on representing obse...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognition 2015-11, Vol.144, p.58-66
Hauptverfasser: Freier, Livia, Cooper, Richard P., Mareschal, Denis
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container_title Cognition
container_volume 144
creator Freier, Livia
Cooper, Richard P.
Mareschal, Denis
description •In unfamiliar tasks, children frequently imitate actions that are irrelevant to achieve goals.•Over-imitation was investigated using a familiar sequential action.•A decrease of over-imitation behaviour was observed from 3 to 5years of age.•Learning about event sequences depends on representing observed actions within goal hierarchies. Preschool children’s abilities to learn from observation has been the focus of considerable theoretical and empirical work. A wealth of developmental research suggests that young children reliably over-imitate modeled actions. Across two experiments, we asked whether a single misleading demonstration significantly impacts preschoolers’ planning and execution of a familiar event sequence. In Experiment 1, we found that, despite sufficient task knowledge, 3- and 5-year-olds readily incorporated irrelevant modeled actions into their own performances. In Experiment 2, we found that when the underlying event structure was spatially cued, over-imitation was no longer apparent in preschooler’s re-enactment of the sequence. These findings serve as evidence for a tight coupling between perceptual and conceptual processing systems in early action planning. Taken together, findings from both experiments suggest that over-imitation behaviour in these tasks results from a failure to evaluate the observed links between procedural components of the sequence in respect to the overarching goal of the task. These results further contrast with the existing developmental literature by suggesting that, in the context of familiar actions, over-imitation significantly decreases during the preschool period. Findings are discussed in the context of preschoolers’ abilities to plan and execute sequential actions.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.cognition.2015.07.005
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Preschool children’s abilities to learn from observation has been the focus of considerable theoretical and empirical work. A wealth of developmental research suggests that young children reliably over-imitate modeled actions. Across two experiments, we asked whether a single misleading demonstration significantly impacts preschoolers’ planning and execution of a familiar event sequence. In Experiment 1, we found that, despite sufficient task knowledge, 3- and 5-year-olds readily incorporated irrelevant modeled actions into their own performances. In Experiment 2, we found that when the underlying event structure was spatially cued, over-imitation was no longer apparent in preschooler’s re-enactment of the sequence. These findings serve as evidence for a tight coupling between perceptual and conceptual processing systems in early action planning. 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source MEDLINE; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Action development
Action perception
Action planning
Child Development - physiology
Child, Preschool
Cues
Female
Goal-directed actions
Goals
Humans
Imitative Behavior - physiology
Learning - physiology
Male
Over-imitation
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
title The planning and execution of natural sequential actions in the preschool years
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